Wang
Chengshu's research group from the Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant
Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences published a paper entitled "A
bacterial-like Pictet-Spenglerase drives the evolution of fungi to produce
b-carboline glycosides together with separate genes" in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). This study reveals the molecular
mechanism of the entomopathogenic fungus Beauveria bassiana acquiring a
bacterial-derived horizontal transfer (HGT) gene to synthesize β-carbolin
alkaloids and their glycosides.
Different
prokaryotes and eukaryotes can synthesize β-carbolin alkaloids with various
structures, which have important biological activity or medicinal value
respectively. Many β-carbolin alkaloids from fungi have been reported, but the
synthesis mechanism is rarely resolved. Different Pictet-Spenglerase (PS)
enzymes have been identified in different bacteria, plants and animals, which
can synthesize β-carbolin skeleton with tryptophan as a substrate, but PS
enzymes derived from fungi are not clear.
This
study found a HGT gene highly homologous to the marine bacterial PS enzyme in
the genome of Beauveria
bassiana, and named it Fcs1. Through heterologous expression
in Escherichia coli and yeast, it was found that the gene can synthesize
β-carbolin skeleton; Fcs1 was overexpressed in Beauveria bassiana, the products
were isolated, purified and identified to obtain a series of β-carbolin
alkaloids and their Glycoside compounds, most of which are new structural
compounds. The study compared the transcriptome analysis between the wild
strain and the Fcs1 overexpression strain, and obtained multiple differentially
expressed potential P450 genes. At the same time, yeast expression and gene
deletion analysis proved that a CYP684B2 family gene (named Fcs2) can oxidize
the β-carbolin skeleton at multiple sites, and found the cofactor gene Fcs3 of
Fcs2. Further gene function verification showed that a pair of tandem glycosyl-methyltransferase
genes were responsible for the sugar methylation modification of carboxyl and
multi-site hydroxyl groups to generate β-carbolin glycosides with different
structures, which were named bassicarbosides.
Different
from the structural characteristics of typical fungal secondary metabolic gene
clusters, the different functional genes identified in this study are located
on different chromosomes of Beauveria bassiana, but the CYP684A2 family genes
adjacent to Fcs1 do not have the oxidized β-carbolin skeleton activity, but has
a high degree of similarity with Fcs2, showing the evolutionary characteristics
of clustering around the Fcs1 gene. In addition, the analysis found that when
the homologous gene of Fcs1 in the relative species of Beauveria bassiana does
not exist, the P450 highly homologous to Fcs2 in the genome does not have
oxidative activity. Molecular docking and site mutation proved that there were
differences in some key sites of Fcs2 homologous proteins in fungi without
Fcs1.
This
study enriched the types of PS enzymes derived from fungi, revealed that the
acquisition of key HGT genes can promote the functional evolution of associated
genes, and obtained transitional evidence for the formation of fungal secondary
metabolic gene clusters. The research work is supported by the National Natural
Science Foundation of China Innovative Research Group Project and the Key
Research Program of Frontier Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Background
reading
It's
a fungus that grows in soils all over the world. It is widely used as a sprayed
biological insecticide to control a wide range of pests such as bed bugs,
termites, thrips, whiteflies, aphids, and various beetles. It acts as a
parasite on various arthropod species, causing white muscardine disease.
The Wall