Journal article

The cross-pathway control system regulates production of the secondary metabolite toxin, sirodesmin PL, in the ascomycete, Leptosphaeria maculans

CE Elliott, EM Fox, RS Jarvis, BJ Howlett

BMC Microbiology | BIOMED CENTRAL LTD | Published : 2011

Abstract

Background: Sirodesmin PL is a secondary metabolite toxin made by the ascomycetous plant pathogen, Leptosphaeria maculans. The sirodesmin biosynthetic genes are clustered in the genome. The key genes are a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase, sirP, and a pathway-specific transcription factor, sirZ. Little is known about regulation of sirodesmin production. Results: Genes involved in regulation of sirodesmin PL in L. maculans have been identified. Two hundred random insertional T-DNA mutants were screened with an antibacterial assay for ones producing low levels of sirodesmin PL. Three such mutants were isolated and each transcribed sirZ at very low levels. One of the affected genes had high seq..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

We thank Dr Soledade Pedras, University of Saskatchewan, Canada for the kind gift of sirodesmin PL. We thank Dr Patrick Wincker (Genoscope, France), Dr Joelle Anselem (URGI, France), Dr Thierry Rouxel and Dr Marie-Helene Balesdent (Bioger, France), for pre-publication access to the genome sequence of Leptosphaeria maculans. We also thank the Grains Research and Development Corporation, Australia, for funds that support our research.