AI Article Synopsis

  • Rad1 and Rad10 are essential proteins that help repair UV-damaged DNA in fungi, specifically by reactivating conidia after UV exposure, but they require light for effective repair.
  • Their interaction with white collar proteins WC1 and WC2 indicates that these proteins regulate photolyases Phr1 and Phr2, which improve the repair of UV-induced DNA damage.
  • Overall, while Rad1 and Rad10 enhance photoprotection against UV damage in conidia, they are less effective in nighttime conditions, limiting their ability to perform nucleotide excision repair in natural field settings.

Article Abstract

serves as a main source of global fungal insecticides, which are based on the active ingredient of formulated conidia vulnerable to solar ultraviolet (UV) irradiation and restrained for all-weather application in green agriculture. The anti-UV proteins Rad1 and Rad10 are required for the nucleotide excision repair (NER) of UV-injured DNA in model yeast, but their anti-UV roles remain rarely exploredin filamentous fungi. Here, Rad1 and Rad10 orthologues that accumulated more in the nuclei than the cytoplasm of proved capable of reactivating UVB-impaired or UVB-inactivated conidia efficiently by 5h light exposure but incapable of doing so by 24 h dark incubation (NER) if the accumulated UVB irradiation was lethal. Each orthologue was found interacting with the other and two white collar proteins (WC1 and WC2), which proved to be regulators of two photolyases (Phr1 and Phr2) and individually more efficient in the photorepair of UVB-induced DNA lesions than either photolyase alone. The fungal photoreactivation activity was more or far more compromised when the protein-protein interactions were abolished in the absence of Rad1 or Rad10 than when either Phr1 or Phr2 lost function. The detected protein-protein interactions suggest direct links of either Rad1 or Rad10 to two photolyase regulators. In , therefore, Rad1 and Rad10 tied to the photolyase regulators have high activities in the photoprotection of formulated conidia from solar UV damage but insufficient NER activities in the field, where night (dark) time is too short, and no other roles in the fungal lifecycle in vitro and in vivo.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9692854PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jof8111124DOI Listing

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