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Protein Activity of the Fusarium fujikuroi Rhodopsins CarO and OpsA and Their Relation to Fungus-Plant Interaction. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Fungi have various photosensory proteins that help them adapt to light changes, but the functions of green light-sensing rhodopsins are still unclear.
  • The rice pathogen analyzed contains two rhodopsins, CarO, which acts as a light-driven proton pump, and OpsA, which shows no pumping activity under tested conditions.
  • The presence of rhodopsin genes in fungi associated with plants hints at their ecological significance, as a strain lacking CarO led to worse symptoms in infected rice plants, suggesting CarO aids in regulating plant infections.

Article Abstract

Fungi possess diverse photosensory proteins that allow them to perceive different light wavelengths and to adapt to changing light conditions in their environment. The biological and physiological roles of the green light-sensing rhodopsins in fungi are not yet resolved. The rice plant pathogen exhibits two different rhodopsins, CarO and OpsA. CarO was previously characterized as a light-driven proton pump. We further analyzed the pumping behavior of CarO by patch-clamp experiments. Our data show that CarO pumping activity is strongly augmented in the presence of the plant hormone indole-3-acetic acid and in sodium acetate, in a dose-dependent manner under slightly acidic conditions. By contrast, under these and other tested conditions, the rhodopsin (NR)-like rhodopsin OpsA did not exhibit any pump activity. Basic local alignment search tool (BLAST) searches in the genomes of ascomycetes revealed the occurrence of rhodopsin-encoding genes mainly in phyto-associated or phytopathogenic fungi, suggesting a possible correlation of the presence of rhodopsins with fungal ecology. In accordance, rice plants infected with a CarO-deficient strain showed more severe bakanae symptoms than the reference strain, indicating a potential role of the CarO rhodopsin in the regulation of plant infection by this fungus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5796164PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms19010215DOI Listing

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