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Journal of Bacteriology, October 1999, p. 6469-6477, Vol. 181, No. 20
Laboratory of Clinical Investigation, National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, Maryland
20892-1882,1 and Cotton Pathology
Research Unit, Southern Crops Research Laboratory, USDA Agricultural
Research Service, College Station, Texas
778452
Received 9 July 1999/Accepted 17 July 1999
Aspergillus fumigatus, a filamentous fungus producing
bluish-green conidia, is an important opportunistic pathogen that
primarily affects immunocompromised patients. Conidial pigmentation of
A. fumigatus significantly influences its virulence in a
murine model. In the present study, six genes, forming a gene cluster
spanning 19 kb, were identified as involved in conidial pigment
biosynthesis in A. fumigatus. Northern blot analyses showed
the six genes to be developmentally regulated and expressed during
conidiation. The gene products of alb1 (for "albino
1"), arp1 (for "aspergillus reddish-pink 1"), and
arp2 have high similarity to polyketide synthases,
scytalone dehydratases, and hydroxynaphthalene reductases, respectively, found in the dihydroxynaphthalene (DHN)-melanin pathway
of brown and black fungi. The abr1 gene (for "aspergillus brown 1") encodes a putative protein possessing two signatures of
multicopper oxidases. The abr2 gene product has homology to the laccase encoded by the yA gene of Aspergillus
nidulans. The function of ayg1 (for "aspergillus
yellowish-green 1") remains unknown. Involvement of the six genes in
conidial pigmentation was confirmed by the altered conidial color
phenotypes that resulted from disruption of each gene in A. fumigatus. The presence of a DHN-melanin pathway in A. fumigatus was supported by the accumulation of scytalone and
flaviolin in the arp1 deletant, whereas only flaviolin was
accumulated in the arp2 deletants. Scytalone and flaviolin
are well-known signature metabolites of the DHN-melanin pathway. Based
on DNA sequence similarity, gene disruption results, and biochemical
analyses, we conclude that the 19-kb DNA fragment contains a six-gene
cluster which is required for conidial pigment biosynthesis in A. fumigatus. However, the presence of abr1,
abr2, and ayg1 in addition to alb1,
arp1, and arp2 suggests that conidial pigment
biosynthesis in A. fumigatus is more complex than the known
DHN-melanin pathway.
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
A Developmentally Regulated Gene Cluster Involved
in Conidial Pigment Biosynthesis in Aspergillus
fumigatus
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: NIH/NIAID,
Building 10, Room 11C304, 10 Center Dr., MSC 1882, Bethesda, MD
20892-1882. Phone: (301) 496-1602. Fax: (301) 402-1003. E-mail:
June_Kwon-Chung{at}NIH.GOV.
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