An old yellow enzyme gene that controls the branch point between Aspergillus fumigatus and Claviceps purpurea ergot alkaloid pathways

Author:

Coyle CM, Cheng JZ, O’Connor SE, Panaccione DG

Date: 20 May 2010

Abstract:

Ergot fungi in the genus Claviceps and several related fungi in the family Clavicipitaceae produce toxic ergot alkaloids. These fungi produce a variety of ergot alkaloids including clavines as well as lysergic acid derivatives. Ergot alkaloids also are produced by the distantly related, opportunistic human pathogen, Aspergillus fumigatus. However, this fungus produces festuclavine and fumigaclavines A, B, and C, which collectively differ from clavines of clavicipitaceous fungi in saturation of the last assembled of four rings in the ergoline ring structure. The two lineages are hypothesized to share early steps of the ergot alkaloid pathway before diverging at some point after the synthesis of the tricyclic intermediate chanoclavine-I. Disruption of easA, a gene predicted to encode a flavin-dependent oxidoreductase of the old yellow enzyme class, in A. fumigatus led to accumulation of chanoclavine-I and chanoclavine-I-aldehyde. Complementation of the A. fumigatus easA mutant with a wild-type allele from the same fungus restored the wild-type profile of ergot alkaloids. These data demonstrate that the product of A. fumigatus easA is required for incorporation of chanoclavine-I-aldehyde into more complex ergot alkaloids, presumably by reducing the double conjugated to the aldehyde group thus facilitating ring closure. Augmentation of the A. fumigatus easA mutant with a homologue of easA from C. purpurea resulted in accumulation of ergot alkaloids typical of clavicipitaceous fungi (agroclavine, setoclavine, and its diastereoisomer isosetoclavine). These data indicate that functional differences in the easA-encoded old yellow enzymes of A. fumigatus and C. purpurea result in divergence of their respective ergot alkaloid pathways.

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