Compatible solutes determine the heat resistance of conidia

Asexually developed fungal spores (conidia) are key for the massive proliferation and dispersal of filamentous fungi. Germination of conidia and subsequent formation of a mycelium network give rise to many societal problems related to human and animal fungal diseases, post-harvest food spoilage, los...

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Published inFungal biology and biotechnology Vol. 10; no. 1; pp. 1 - 21
Main Authors Seekles, Sjoerd J, van den Brule, Tom, Punt, Maarten, Dijksterhuis, Jan, Arentshorst, Mark, Ijadpanahsaravi, Maryam, Roseboom, Winfried, Meuken, Gwendolin, Ongenae, Véronique, Zwerus, Jordy, Ohm, Robin A, Kramer, Gertjan, Wösten, Han A. B, de Winde, Johannes H, Ram, Arthur F. J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London BioMed Central Ltd 13.11.2023
BioMed Central
BMC
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Summary:Asexually developed fungal spores (conidia) are key for the massive proliferation and dispersal of filamentous fungi. Germination of conidia and subsequent formation of a mycelium network give rise to many societal problems related to human and animal fungal diseases, post-harvest food spoilage, loss of harvest caused by plant-pathogenic fungi and moulding of buildings. Conidia are highly stress resistant compared to the vegetative mycelium and therefore even more difficult to tackle. In this study, complementary approaches are used to show that accumulation of mannitol and trehalose as the main compatible solutes during spore maturation is a key factor for heat resistance of conidia. Compatible solute concentrations increase during conidia maturation, correlating with increased heat resistance of mature conidia. This maturation only occurs when conidia are attached to the conidiophore. Moreover, conidia of a mutant Aspergillus niger strain, constructed by deleting genes involved in mannitol and trehalose synthesis and consequently containing low concentrations of these compatible solutes, exhibit a sixteen orders of magnitude more sensitive heat shock phenotype compared to wild-type conidia. Cultivation at elevated temperature results in adaptation of conidia with increased heat resistance. Transcriptomic and proteomic analyses revealed two putative heat shock proteins to be upregulated under these conditions. However, conidia of knock-out strains lacking these putative heat shock proteins did not show a reduced heat resistance. Heat stress resistance of fungal conidia is mainly determined by the compatible solute composition established during conidia maturation. To prevent heat resistant fungal spore contaminants, food processing protocols should consider environmental conditions stimulating compatible solute accumulation and potentially use compatible solute biosynthesis as a novel food preservation target.
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ISSN:2054-3085
2054-3085
DOI:10.1186/s40694-023-00168-9