Zaehle_2014_Chem.Biol_21_719

Reference

Title : Terrein biosynthesis in Aspergillus terreus and its impact on phytotoxicity - Zaehle_2014_Chem.Biol_21_719
Author(s) : Zaehle C , Gressler M , Shelest E , Geib E , Hertweck C , Brock M
Ref : Chemical Biology , 21 :719 , 2014
Abstract :

Terrein is a fungal metabolite with ecological, antimicrobial, antiproliferative, and antioxidative activities. Although it is produced by Aspergillus terreus as one of its major secondary metabolites, not much is known about its biosynthetic pathway. Here, we describe an unexpected discovery of the terrein biosynthesis gene locus made while we were looking for a PKS gene involved in production of conidia coloration pigments common for Aspergilli. The gene, ATEG_00145, here named terA, is essential for terrein biosynthesis and heterologous production of TerA in Aspergillus niger revealed an unusual plasticity in the products formed, yielding a mixture of 4-hydroxy-6-methylpyranone, orsellinic acid, and 6,7-dihydroxymellein. Biochemical and molecular genetic analyses indicate a low extension cycle specificity of TerA. Furthermore, 6-hydroxymellein was identified as a key intermediate in terrein biosynthesis. We find that terrein production is highly induced on plant-derived media, that terrein has phytotoxic activity on plant growth, and induces lesions on fruit surfaces.

PubMedSearch : Zaehle_2014_Chem.Biol_21_719
PubMedID: 24816227
Gene_locus related to this paper: aspte-AT1

Related information

Gene_locus aspte-AT1

Citations formats

Zaehle C, Gressler M, Shelest E, Geib E, Hertweck C, Brock M (2014)
Terrein biosynthesis in Aspergillus terreus and its impact on phytotoxicity
Chemical Biology 21 :719

Zaehle C, Gressler M, Shelest E, Geib E, Hertweck C, Brock M (2014)
Chemical Biology 21 :719