AI Article Synopsis

  • The text discusses an opportunistic human pathogen that uses a protective layer of melanin to evade the immune system, contributing to its virulence.
  • Researchers conducted a genomic analysis comparing two variants of this pathogen, identifying thousands of genetic variants, including high-impact mutations affecting its melanin production.
  • The study found that white-spore isolates exhibit thermosensitivity, with a mutation linked to thermal sensitivity in yeast possibly explaining this characteristic.

Article Abstract

is a potentially deadly opportunistic human pathogen. has evolved a variety of mechanisms to evade detection by the immune system. For example, the conidium surface is covered in a layer of 1,8-dihydroxynaphthalene (DHN) melanin which masks the antigen macrophages use for recognition. DHN melanin also protects conidia from ultraviolet radiation and gives conidia their characteristic green-grayish color. Here, we conducted genomic analysis of two closely related white-spore natural variants of in comparison to two closely related green-spore isolates to identify a genetic basis of the white-spore phenotype. Illumina whole-genome resequencing data of the four isolates was used to identify variants that were shared in the white-spore isolates and different from both the green-spore isolates and the Af293 reference genome (which is also a green-spore isolate). We identified 4,279 single nucleotide variants and 1,785 insertion/deletions fitting this pattern. Among these, we identified 64 variants predicted to be high impact, loss-of-function mutations. One of these variants is a single nucleotide deletion that results in a frameshift in (), the core biosynthetic gene in the DHN melanin encoding gene cluster. The frameshift mutation in the white-spore isolates leads to a truncated protein in which a phosphopantetheine attachment site (PP-binding domain) is interrupted and an additional PP-binding domain and a thioesterase domain are omitted. Growth rate analysis of white-spore and green-spore isolates at 37°C and 48°C revealed that white-spore isolates are thermosensitive. Growth rate of Af293 and a null mutant in the Af293 background suggests is not directly involved in the thermosensitivity phenotype. Further, our study identified a mutation in a gene ( associated with thermal sensitivity in yeasts which could also be responsible for the thermosensitivity of the white-spore mutants. Overall, we used comparative genomics to identify the mutation and protein alterations responsible for the white-spore phenotype of environmental isolates of .

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10512363PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/ffunb.2022.897954DOI Listing

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