Differential Expression of Cell Wall Remodeling Genes Is Part of the Dynamic Phase-Specific Transcriptional Program of Conidial Germination of Trichoderma asperelloides

The nature of saprophytic and mycoparasitic hyphal growth of spp. has been studied extensively, yet its initiation via conidial germination in this genus is less well understood. Using near-synchronous germinating cultures of , we followed the morphological progression from dormant conidia to initia...

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Published inJournal of fungi (Basel) Vol. 8; no. 8; p. 854
Main Authors Gortikov, Maggie, Yakubovich, Elizabeta, Wang, Zheng, López-Giráldez, Francesc, Tu, Yujia, Townsend, Jeffrey P, Yarden, Oded
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 15.08.2022
MDPI
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Summary:The nature of saprophytic and mycoparasitic hyphal growth of spp. has been studied extensively, yet its initiation via conidial germination in this genus is less well understood. Using near-synchronous germinating cultures of , we followed the morphological progression from dormant conidia to initial polar growth to germling formation and to evidence for first branching. We found that the stage-specific transcriptional profile of is one of the most dynamic described to date: transcript abundance of over 5000 genes-comprising approximately half of the annotated genome-was unremittingly reduced in the transition from dormancy to polar growth. Conversely, after the onset of germination, the transcript abundance of approximately a quarter of the genome was unremittingly elevated during the transition from elongation to initial branching. These changes are a testimony to the substantial developmental events that accompany germination. Bayesian network analysis identified several chitinase- and glucanase-encoding genes as active transcriptional hubs during germination. Furthermore, the expression of specific members of the chitin synthase and glucan elongase families was significantly increased during germination in the presence of -a known host of the mycoparasite-indicating that host recognition can occur during the early stages of mycoparasite development.
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ISSN:2309-608X
2309-608X
DOI:10.3390/jof8080854