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The regulatory role of the Aspergillus flavus core retromer complex in aflatoxin metabolism.

Authors :
Sen Wang
Yu Wang
Yinghang Liu
Lin Liu
Jinyu Li
Kunlong Yang
Mengxin Liu
Wanlin Zeng
Ling Qin
Ranxun Lin
Xinyi Nie
Longguang Jiang
Shihua Wang
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry. Jul2022, Vol. 298 Issue 7, p1-15. 15p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Aflatoxins are a series of highly toxic and carcinogenic secondary metabolites that are synthesized by Aspergillus species. The degradation of aflatoxin enzymes is an important regulatory mechanism which modulates mycotoxin producing. The retromer complex is responsible for the retrograde transport of specific biomolecules and the vacuolar fusion in the intracellular transport. Late endosomal-associated GTPase (Rab7) has been shown to be a downstream effector protein of the retromer complex. A deficiency in the retromer complex or Rab7 results in several cellular trafficking problems in yeast and humans, like protein abnormal accumulation. However, whether retromer dysfunction is involved in aflatoxin synthesis remains unclear. Here, we report that the core retromer complex, which comprises three vacuolar protein sortingassociated proteins (AflVps26-AflVps29-AflVps35), is essential for the development of dormant and resistant fungal forms such as conidia (asexual reproductive spore) and sclerotia (hardened fungal mycelium), as well as aflatoxin production and pathogenicity, in Aspergillus flavus. In particular, we show the AflVps26-AflVps29-AflVps35 complex is negatively correlated with aflatoxin exportation. Structural simulation, sitespecific mutagenesis, and coimmunoprecipitation experiments showed that interactions among AflVps26, AflVps29, and AflVps35 played crucial roles in the retromer complex executing its core functions. We further found an intrinsic connection between AflRab7 and the retromer involved in vesicle-vacuole fusion, which in turn affected the accumulation of aflatoxin synthesis-associated enzymes, suggesting that they work together to regulate the production of toxins. Overall, these results provide mechanistic insights that contribute to our understanding of the regulatory role of the core retromer complex in aflatoxin metabolism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
298
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
158580587
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102120