Gene inactivation in the plant pathogen Glomerella cingulata: three strategies for the disruption of the pectin lyase gene pnIA
- 1 March 1995
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Molecular Genetics and Genomics
- Vol. 246 (2), 196-205
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00294682
Abstract
The feasibility of performing routine transformation-mediated mutagenesis in Glomerella cingulata was analysed by adopting three one-step gene disruption strategies targeted at the pectin lyase gene pnIA. The efficiencies of disruption following transformation with gene replacement- or gene truncation-disruption vectors were compared. To effect replacement-disruption, G. cingulata was transformed with a vector carrying DNA from the pnlA locus in which the majority of the coding sequence had been replaced by the gene for hygromycin B resistance. Two of the five transformants investigated contained an inactivated pnlA gene (pnlA − );both also contained ectopically integrated vector sequences. The efficacy of gene disruption by transformation with two gene truncation-disruption vectors was also assessed. Both vectors carried a 5′and 3′truncated copy of the pnlA coding sequence, adjacent to the gene for hygromycin B resistance. The promoter sequences controlling the selectable marker differed in the two vectors. In one vector the homologous G. cingulata gpdA promoter controlled hygromycin B phosphotransferase expression (homologous truncation vector), whereas in the second vector promoter elements were from the Aspergillus nidulans gpdA gene (heterologous truncation vector). Following transformation with the homologous truncation vector, nine transformants were analysed by Southern hybridisation; no transformants contained a disrupted pnlA gene. Of nineteen heterologous truncation vector transformants, three contained a disrupted pnlA gene; Southern analysis revealed single integrations of vector sequence at pnlA in two of these transformants. pnlA mRNA was not detected by Northern hybridisation in pnlA-transformants. pnlA-transformants failed to produce a PNLA protein with a pI identical to one normally detected in wild-type isolates by silver and activity staining of isoelectric focussing gels. Pathogenesis on Capsicum and apple was unaffected by disruption of the pnlA gene, indicating that the corresponding gene product, PNLA, is not essential for pathogenicity. Gene disruption is a feasible method for selectively mutating defined loci in G. cingulata for functional analysis of the corresponding gene products.This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- The pectin lyase-encoding gene (pnl) family from Glomerella cingulata: characterization of pnlA and its expression in yeastGene, 1994
- Cloning and characterization of the gene encoding the endo polygalacturonase‐inhibiting protein (PGIP) of Phaseolus vulgaris L.The Plant Journal, 1992
- Effect of Gene Disruption of Trichodiene Synthase on the Virulence ofGibberella pulicarisMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1992
- The biology and control of Colletotrichum species on tropical fruit cropsPlant Pathology, 1990
- Isolation of metabolic genes and demonstration of gene disruption in the phytopathogenic fungus Ustilago maydisGene, 1989
- An Extracellular Pectate Lyase is the Pathogenicity Factor of the Soft-Rotting BacteriumPseudomonas viridiflavaMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1988
- Construction and Characterization of anErwinia chrysanthemiMutant with Directed Deletions in All of the Pectate Lyase Structural GenesMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1988
- Recombination-stimulating sequences in yeast ribosomal DNA correspond to sequences regulating transcription by RNA polymerase ICell, 1987
- Rapid preparation of DNA from filamentous fungiLetters in Applied Microbiology, 1985
- [12] One-step gene disruption in yeastMethods in Enzymology, 1983