Tauber_2016_Environ.Microbiol_18_5218

Reference

Title : Bacteria induce pigment formation in the basidiomycete Serpula lacrymans - Tauber_2016_Environ.Microbiol_18_5218
Author(s) : Tauber JP , Schroeckh V , Shelest E , Brakhage AA , Hoffmeister D
Ref : Environ Microbiol , 18 :5218 , 2016
Abstract :

Basidiomycete fungi are characterized ecologically for their vital functional role in ecosystem carbon recycling and chemically for their capacity to produce a diverse array of small molecules. Chromophoric natural products derived from the quinone precursor atromentin, such as variegatic acid and involutin, have been shown to function in redox cycling. Yet, in the context of an inter-kingdom natural system these pigments are still elusive. Here, we co-cultured the model saprotrophic basidiomycete Serpula lacrymans with an ubiquitous terrestrial bacterium, either Bacillus subtilis, Pseudomonas putida, or Streptomyces iranensis. For each, there was induction of the gene cluster encoding a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase-like enzyme (atromentin synthetase) and an aminotransferase which together produce atromentin. Correspondingly, during co-culturing there was an increase in secreted atromentin-derived pigments, i.e., variegatic, xerocomic, isoxerocomic, and atromentic acid. Bioinformatic analyses from 14 quinone synthetase genes, twelve of which are encoded in a cluster, identified a common promoter motif indicating a general regulatory mechanism for numerous basidiomycetes.

PubMedSearch : Tauber_2016_Environ.Microbiol_18_5218
PubMedID: 27699944
Gene_locus related to this paper: serl9-nps3

Related information

Gene_locus serl9-nps3

Citations formats

Tauber JP, Schroeckh V, Shelest E, Brakhage AA, Hoffmeister D (2016)
Bacteria induce pigment formation in the basidiomycete Serpula lacrymans
Environ Microbiol 18 :5218

Tauber JP, Schroeckh V, Shelest E, Brakhage AA, Hoffmeister D (2016)
Environ Microbiol 18 :5218