A new non-hydrophobic cell wall protein (CWP10) of Metarhizium anisopliae enhances conidial hydrophobicity when expressed in Beauveria bassiana.

Appl Microbiol Biotechnol

Institute of Microbiology, College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, People's Republic of China.

Published: January 2010

A cell wall protein, CWP10, resolved from the conidial formic acid extract of a Metarhizium anisopliae isolate, was characterized as a new 9.9-kDa protein with a 32-aa signal peptide with a central hydrophobic region (ca. 10 residues) at its N-terminus. This protein was proven neither to be hydrophobic nor glycosylated and encoded by a 363-bp, single-copy gene with three introns. CWP10 was existent in the conidial extracts of seven of 18 tested M. anisopliae isolates and much more abundant (immunogold-labeled) on conidial walls than in cytoplasm. Integrating the gene into a CWP10-absent strain of Beauveria bassiana led to excellent expression of CWP10 in aerial conidia, increasing net conidial hydrophobicity by 10.8% or adhesion to hydrophobic Teflon by 1.3-fold. However, the expressed protein had no effect on conidial tolerance to thermal and ultraviolet stresses. This is the first report on a non-hydrophobic cell-wall protein enhancing conidial hydrophobicity and adhesion of the fungal species.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00253-009-2083-8DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

conidial hydrophobicity
12
cell wall
8
wall protein
8
protein cwp10
8
metarhizium anisopliae
8
beauveria bassiana
8
conidial
7
protein
6
non-hydrophobic cell
4
cwp10
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!