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J Bacteriol, July 1998, p. 3592-3597, Vol. 180, No. 14
Departments of Biochemistry and Medical
Biochemistry and Neurobiotechnology Center, The Ohio State
University, Columbus, Ohio 43210
Received 27 February 1998/Accepted 8 May 1998
The germinating conidia of many phytopathogenic fungi on hosts must
differentiate into an infection structure called the appressorium in
order to penetrate their hosts. Chemical signals, such as the host's
surface wax or fruit ripening hormone, ethylene, trigger germination
and appressorium formation of the avocado pathogen Colletotrichum
gloeosporioides only after the conidia are in contact with a hard
surface. What role this contact plays is unknown. Here, we describe
isolation of genes expressed during the early stage of hard-surface
treatment by a differential-display method and report characterization
of one of these cloned genes, chip1 (Colletotrichum hard-surface induced protein 1 gene), which
encodes a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme. RNA blots clearly showed that it is induced by hard-surface contact and that ethylene treatment enhanced this induction. The predicted open reading frame
(ubc1Cg) would encode a 16.2-kDa
ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme, which shows 82% identity to the
Saccharomyces cerevisiae UBC4-UBC5 E2 enzyme, comprising a
major part of total ubiquitin-conjugating activity in stressed yeast
cells. UBC1Cg can complement the proteolysis deficiency of
the S. cerevisiae ubc4 ubc5 mutant, indicating that ubiquitin-dependent protein degradation is involved in conidial germination and appressorial differentiation.
0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Identification of a Gene Product Induced by
Hard-Surface Contact of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides
Conidia as a Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme by Yeast
Complementation
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address:
Neurobiotechnology Center, The Ohio State University, 206 Rightmire
Hall, 1060 Carmack Rd., Columbus, OH 43210. Phone: (614) 292-5682. Fax:
(614) 292-5379. E-mail: kolattukudy.2{at}osu.edu.
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