Cell wall formation and maintenance are crucial for hyphal morphogenesis. In many filamentous fungi, chitin is one of the main structural components of the cell wall. Aspergillus nidulans ChsB, a chitin synthase, and CsmA, a chitin synthase with a myosin motor-like domain (MMD) at its N-terminus, both localize predominantly at the hyphal tip regions and at forming septa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChitin is a major cell wall component of many filamentous fungi. Among the eight chitin synthase genes of Aspergillus nidulans, csmA and csmB encode a myosin motor-like domain (MMD) and a chitin synthase domain (CSD) at their N- and C-termini respectively. In our previous reports, we suggested that CsmA and CsmB play compensatory roles essential for polarized hyphal growth although their functions do not completely overlap, and that their MMDs are essential for their functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChitin is one of the major cell wall components of ascomycete filamentous fungi, and chitin synthesis plays important roles in the morphogenesis of hyphae. In the Aspergillus nidulans genome, there are two genes, csmA and csmB, that encode a myosin motor-like domain (MMD) at their N-termini and a chitin synthase domain (CSD) at their C-termini. In our previous studies, we found that the MMD of CsmA was required for its functionality, and that CsmA and CsmB had certain overlapping functions essential for polarized filamentous growth.
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