Journal of Advanced Research (May 2024)

Two aminopeptidase I homologs convergently contribute to pathobiology of fungal entomopathogen Beauveria bassiana via divergent physiology-dependent autophagy pathways for vacuolar targeting

  • Jin-Li Ding,
  • Kang Wei,
  • Ming-Guang Feng,
  • Sheng-Hua Ying

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 59
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Introduction: In yeast, the cytoplasm-to-vacuole targeting (Cvt) pathway acts as a biosynthetic autophagy-related process, in which vacuolar targeting of hydrolase is mediated by the machineries involved in the selective autophagy. However, the mechanistic insights into vacuolar targeting of hydrolases through the selective autophagy pathway still remain enigmatic in filamentous fungi. Objectives: Our study aims to investigate the mechanisms involved in vacuolar targeting of hydrolases in filamentous fungi. Methods: The filamentous entomopathogenic fungus Beauveria bassiana was used as a representative of filamentous fungi. We identified the homologs of yeast aminopeptidase I (Ape1) in B. bassiana by bioinformatic analyses and characterized their physiological roles by gene function analyses. Pathways for vacuolar targeting of hydrolases were investigated via molecular trafficking analyses. Results: B. bassiana has two homologs of yeast aminopeptidase I (Ape1) which are designated as BbApe1A and BbApe1B. The two homologs of yeast Ape1 contribute to starvation tolerance, development, and virulence in B. bassiana. Significantly, BbNbr1 acts as a selective autophagy receptor to mediate the vacuolar targeting of the two Ape1 proteins, in which BbApe1B interacts with BbNbr1 also directly interacting with BbAtg8, and BbApe1A has an additional requirement of the scaffold protein BbAtg11 that interacts with BbNbr1 and BbAtg8. Protein processing occurs at both terminuses of BbApe1A and only at carboxyl terminus of BbApe1B, which is also dependent on the autophagy-related proteins. Together, the functions and translocation processes of the two Ape1 proteins are associated with autophagy in fungal lifecycle. Conclusion: This study reveals the functions and translocation processes for vacuolar hydrolases in the insect-pathogenic fungi and improves our understandings of the Nbr1-mediated vacuolar targeting pathway in the filamentous fungi.

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