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Functional genomics of adhesion, invasion, and mycelial formation in Schizosaccharomyces pombe
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-08, 10:08 authored by James Dodgson, Hema Avula, Kwang-Lae Hoe, Dong-Uk Kim, Han-Oh Park, Jacqueline Hayles, John ArmstrongInvestigation into the switch between single-celled and filamentous forms of fungi may provide insights into cell polarity, differentiation, and fungal pathogenicity. At the molecular level, much of this investigation has fallen on two closely related budding yeasts, Candida albicans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Recently, the much more distant fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe was shown to form invasive filaments after nitrogen limitation (E. Amoah-Buahin, N. Bone, and J. Armstrong, Eukaryot. Cell 4:1287-1297, 2005) and this genetically tractable organism provides an alternative system for the study of dimorphic growth. Here we describe a second mode of mycelial formation of S. pombe, on rich media. Screening of an S. pombe haploid deletion library identified 12 genes required for mycelial development which encode potential transcription factors, orthologues of S. cerevisiae Sec14p and Tlg2p, and the formin For3, among others. These were further grouped into two phenotypic classes representing different stages of the process. We show that galactose-dependent cell adhesion and actin assembly are both required for mycelial formation and mutants lacking a range of genes controlling cell polarity all produce mycelia but with radically altered morphology.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Eukaryotic CellISSN
1535-9778Publisher
American Society for MicrobiologyExternal DOI
Issue
8Volume
8Page range
1298-306Pages
8.0Department affiliated with
- Biochemistry Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes