PLoS Pathogens (Oct 2011)

A phenome-based functional analysis of transcription factors in the cereal head blight fungus, Fusarium graminearum.

  • Hokyoung Son,
  • Young-Su Seo,
  • Kyunghun Min,
  • Ae Ran Park,
  • Jungkwan Lee,
  • Jian-Ming Jin,
  • Yang Lin,
  • Peijian Cao,
  • Sae-Yeon Hong,
  • Eun-Kyung Kim,
  • Seung-Ho Lee,
  • Aram Cho,
  • Seunghoon Lee,
  • Myung-Gu Kim,
  • Yongsoo Kim,
  • Jung-Eun Kim,
  • Jin-Cheol Kim,
  • Gyung Ja Choi,
  • Sung-Hwan Yun,
  • Jae Yun Lim,
  • Minkyun Kim,
  • Yong-Hwan Lee,
  • Yang-Do Choi,
  • Yin-Won Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1002310
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 10
p. e1002310

Abstract

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Fusarium graminearum is an important plant pathogen that causes head blight of major cereal crops. The fungus produces mycotoxins that are harmful to animal and human. In this study, a systematic analysis of 17 phenotypes of the mutants in 657 Fusarium graminearum genes encoding putative transcription factors (TFs) resulted in a database of over 11,000 phenotypes (phenome). This database provides comprehensive insights into how this cereal pathogen of global significance regulates traits important for growth, development, stress response, pathogenesis, and toxin production and how transcriptional regulations of these traits are interconnected. In-depth analysis of TFs involved in sexual development revealed that mutations causing defects in perithecia development frequently affect multiple other phenotypes, and the TFs associated with sexual development tend to be highly conserved in the fungal kingdom. Besides providing many new insights into understanding the function of F. graminearum TFs, this mutant library and phenome will be a valuable resource for characterizing the gene expression network in this fungus and serve as a reference for studying how different fungi have evolved to control various cellular processes at the transcriptional level.