Geib_2016_Cell.Chem.Biol_23_587

Reference

Title : A Non-canonical Melanin Biosynthesis Pathway Protects Aspergillus terreus Conidia from Environmental Stress - Geib_2016_Cell.Chem.Biol_23_587
Author(s) : Geib E , Gressler M , Viediernikova I , Hillmann F , Jacobsen ID , Nietzsche S , Hertweck C , Brock M
Ref : Cell Chemical Biology , 23 :587 , 2016
Abstract :

Melanins are ubiquitous pigments found in all kingdoms of life. Most organisms use them for protection from environmental stress, although some fungi employ melanins as virulence determinants. The human pathogenic fungus Aspergillus fumigatus and related Ascomycetes produce dihydroxynaphthalene- (DHN) melanin in their spores, the conidia, and use it to inhibit phagolysosome acidification. However, biosynthetic origin of melanin in a related fungus, Aspergillus terreus, has remained a mystery because A. terreus lacks genes for synthesis of DHN-melanin. Here we identify genes coding for an unusual NRPS-like enzyme (MelA) and a tyrosinase (TyrP) that A. terreus expressed under conidiation conditions. We demonstrate that MelA produces aspulvinone E, which is activated for polymerization by TyrP. Functional studies reveal that this new pigment, Asp-melanin, confers resistance against UV light and hampers phagocytosis by soil amoeba. Unexpectedly, Asp-melanin does not inhibit acidification of phagolysosomes, thus likely contributing specifically to survival of A. terreus conidia in acidic environments.

PubMedSearch : Geib_2016_Cell.Chem.Biol_23_587
PubMedID: 27133313
Gene_locus related to this paper: aspte-mela , asptn-mela

Related information

Gene_locus aspte-mela    asptn-mela

Citations formats

Geib E, Gressler M, Viediernikova I, Hillmann F, Jacobsen ID, Nietzsche S, Hertweck C, Brock M (2016)
A Non-canonical Melanin Biosynthesis Pathway Protects Aspergillus terreus Conidia from Environmental Stress
Cell Chemical Biology 23 :587

Geib E, Gressler M, Viediernikova I, Hillmann F, Jacobsen ID, Nietzsche S, Hertweck C, Brock M (2016)
Cell Chemical Biology 23 :587