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1,*
1
1 University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Biochemistry,
Vrazov Trg 2, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia
2 University of Ljubljana, Biotechnical Faculty, Department of Biology,
Ljubljana, Slovenia
*
Correspondence: Ana Plemenita
,
ana.plemenitas{at}mf.uni-lj.si
| Abstract |
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Keywords Compatible solutes / differential gene expression / Hal2 / halophile / HOG signaling pathway / Hortaea werneckii / hypersaline water / ions / melanin
| INTRODUCTION |
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&
Gunde-Cimerman 2005). The most relevant differences studied to
date are in plasma membrane composition and properties (Turk et al.
2004,
2007), osmolyte composition
and accumulation of ions (Petrovic et
al. 2002, Kogej et al.
2005,
2006,
2006), melanisation of cell
wall (Kogej et al.
2004,
2006,
2006), differences in HOG
signaling pathway (Turk &
Plemenita
2002), and differential gene expression
(Petrovic et al.
2002, Vaupoti
&
Plemenita
2007). | ECOLOGY OF HORTEA WERNECKII |
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The dominant group of fungi in hypersaline waters of the salterns are black
yeasts (de Hoog 1977) or
meristematic ascomycetes (Sterflinger
et al. 1999) from the order Dothideales. Hortea
werneckii is the dominant black yeast species in hypersaline waters at
salinities above 3.0 M NaCl
(Gunde-Cimerman et al.
2000). Morphology of H. werneckii is characteristically
polymorphic (de Hoog et al. 1993,
Wollenzien et al.
1995, Sterflinger et
al. 1999, Zalar et
al. 1999), hence it has received many designations in the
past (Plemenita
&
Gunde-Cimerman 2005). Its molecular differentiation is based on
the sequencing of the ITS rDNA region and RFLP markers from SSU rDNA and ITS
rDNA regions (de Hoog et al. 1999).
Hortea werneckii was primarily known as the etiological pathogen of human dermatosis called tinea nigra, a superficial infection of the human hand, strictly limited to the salty, greasy stratum corneum of the skin (de Hoog & Gerrits van den Ende 1992, Göttlich et al. 1995). It was also known as a contaminant of salty food (Mok et al. 1981, Todaro et al. 1983) and other low-water-activity substrates such as arid inorganic and organic surfaces (Wollenzien et al. 1995), seawater (Iwatsu & Udagawa 1988) and beach soil (de Hoog & Guého 1998). Two successive yr of investigations of potential mycobiota in evaporite ponds of solar salterns along the Slovenian Adriatic coast revealed that the primary environmental ecological niche of H. werneckii is hypersaline water (Gunde-Cimerman et al. 2000, Butinar et al. 2005). Hortea werneckii was found within the entire environmental salinity range (0.5 – 5.2 M NaCl), with three prominently expressed seasonal peaks, which correlated primarily with high environmental nitrogen values. At 3 – 4.5 M NaCl, at the highest peak in August, H. werneckii represented 85 – 90 % of all isolated fungi, whereas it was detected only occasionally when NaCl concentrations were below 1.0 M. Although it was later also identified in hypersaline waters of eight other salterns on three continents (Gunde-Cimerman et al. 2000, Butinar et al. 2005, Cantrell et al. 2006), it has never been isolated from oligotrophic hypersaline waters nor from athalasso-haline waters of salt lakes and only rarely from hypersaline waters with elevated temperatures (Gunde-Cimerman et al. 2005). Its complex polymorphic life cycle enables H. werneckii to colonise other ecological microniches in the salterns besides brine, such as the surface and interior of wood submerged in brine (Zalar et al. 2005), thick bacterial biofilms on the surface of hypersaline waters, the soil in dry evaporite ponds and the saltern microbial mats (Butinar et al. 2005, Cantrell et al. 2006).
| COMPATIBLE SOLUTE STRATEGY IN THE CELLS OF H. WERNECKII |
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Initial physiological studies in H. werneckii showed that, in
contrast to D. hansenii, it keeps very low intracellular potassium
and sodium levels even when grown in the presence of 4.5 M NaCl.
Interestingly, in H. werneckii the amounts of K+ and
Na+ were the lowest in the cells grown at 3.0 M NaCl. At this
salinity of the medium H. werneckii still grows well, but most
probably this salinity represents a turning point, shown in restricted colony
size, slower growth rate and characteristic changes of physiological behaviour
(Plemenita
& Gunde-Cimerman
2005, Kogej et al.
2007). Our primary studies showed that glycerol is the most
important compatible solute in H. werneckii
(Petrovic et al.
2002), although these authors indicates the possible presence of
other compatible solute(s). Further studies have indeed revealed that H.
werneckii, when grown in hypersaline media, also accumulates a mixture of
organic compounds besides glycerol, including the polyols such as erythritol,
arabitol and mannitol. They varied in amounts both with the salinity of the
growth medium and with the growth phase of the fungal culture
(Table 1). However, the total
amount of polyols correlated well with increasing salinity mostly for the
account of glycerol and during all growth phases
(Kogej et al.
2007).
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When the growth-phase dependence of compatible solutes in H. werneckii grown at extremely high salt concentrations was followed, it appeared that glycerol accumulated predominantly during the exponential growth phase and diminished steeply during the stationary phase. On the other hand, the amount of erythritol increased gradually during the exponential growth phase and reached its highest level during the stationary phase. The amounts of other compatible solutes remained low, thus the total amount of polyols decreased during the stationary phase. In the stationary growth phase, H. werneckii also accumulated different amounts of two different mycosporines in addition to polyols. Mycosporines, substances with an aminocyclohexenone unit bound to an amino acid or amino alcohol group, were initially known as morphogenetic factors during fungal sporulation and as UV-protecting compounds (Bandaranayake 1998). The hypothesis that in certain microorganisms the mycosporines or mycosporine-like amino acids might play a role as complementary compatible solutes (Oren & Gunde-Cimerman 2007) was lately confirmed for H. werneckii with identification of mycosporine-glutaminol-glucoside in produced during the stationary growth phase. This mycosporine accumulated steeply from up to 1.0 M NaCl, and was decreasing at higher NaCl concentrations (Kogej et al. 2006, Kogej et al. 2006). This pattern corresponded with the growth curve of H. werneckii. Given their lower content in the cells (Table 1B), they probably do not have as significant a role in osmoadaptation as polyols, but they still contribute to the internal osmotic potential.
| CELL-WALL MELANISATION REDUCES GLYCEROL LOSS IN H. WERNECKII |
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We hypothesised that melanin might have a role in the osmoadaptation of H. werneckii. A physiological response of H. werneckii to the elevated concentrations of NaCl is hyperaccumulation of glycerol in the cells. Compared to other uncharged polar molecules, glycerol has a high permeability coefficient for passage through the lipid bilayers due to its small molecular mass. Therefore, eukaryotic cells using glycerol as a compatible solute combat this either by accumulation of the lost glycerol by transport systems (Oren 1999), which is energetically costly, or by a special membrane structure (high sterol content or reduced membrane fluidity (Oren 1999). For example, in the halophilic alga Dunaliella, the lowered membrane permeability for glycerol is correlated with its high sterol content (Sheffer et al. 1986, Oren 1999).
Although in H. werneckii the ergosterol as the principal sterol together with 23 other types of sterols (Turk et al. 2004) constitute the most distinct lipid fraction of cell membranes (Mejanelle et al. 2001), the total sterol content remains mainly unchanged with increased salinity. In addition, the plasma membrane of H. werneckii is significantly more fluid over a wide range of salinities in comparison with the membranes of the salt-sensitive and halotolerant fungi (Turk et al. 2004, 2007). Hortea werneckii can thus grow at very high salinities, which require high intracellular amount of glycerol, but at the same time it maintains a very fluid membrane and constant sterol content. It seems that instead of modifying its membrane structure, H. werneckii uses a modification of the cell-wall structure to reduce glycerol leakage from the cells. The cell-wall melanisation namely minimises glycerol loss from the cells: as melanin granules form a continuous layer in the outer part of the cell wall, they create a mechanical permeability barrier for glycerol by reducing the size of pores in the cell wall (Jacobson & Ikeda 2005), and thus improving glycerol retention. At optimal salinities H. werneckii probably maintains a balance between energetically cheap production of glycerol, which partially leaks out of the cells and therefore needs to be recovered, and by energetically more costly synthesis of other compatible solutes, which escape less easily from the cells and are therefore retained more efficiently. Melanised cell walls reduce the energy needs of H. werneckii by retaining the glycerol in the cells. At higher salinities, where melanisation is diminished, higher energy demands of H. werneckii are reflected in reduced growth rates and biomass yield at salinity above 3.0 M NaCl (Kogej, unpubl. data). Perhaps the higher proportion of polymorphic cells observed at the increased salinity is another mechanism for reducing glycerol leakage when melanisation is diminished.
As mentioned above, H. werneckii maintains a highly fluid membrane
also at increased salinities: it decreases C16:0 and increases
cis-C18:2
9,12 fatty-acyl residues of the membrane
lipids (Turk et al.
2004), a phenomenon, which is otherwise observed in cells,
subjected to low temperatures. A molecular mechanism contributing to such an
adaptation mode is partly enabled by the salinity-regulated expression of
genes involved in fatty-acid modification. In S. cerevisiae, such a
response has been observed for genes encoding a
9-desaturase
(OLE1) and two long-chain fatty-acid elongases (ELO2, ELO3)
(Causton et al.
2001). Recently, multiple copies of genes encoding desaturases and
elongases were identified in the genome of H. werneckii. Their
expression pattern, which was determined at different salinities and osmotic
stresses, suggests that desaturases and elongases play an important role
particularly after sudden (acute) changes in environmental salinity
(Gostin
ar, unpubl. data). Gene duplication observed in desaturases,
elongases and many other genes in H. werneckii (see below) has
already been accepted as a general mechanism of adaptation to various stresses
also in other organisms. In S. cerevisiae, for example, most of the
duplicated genes are membrane transporters and genes involved in stress
response (Kondrashov et al.
2002). By modifying the cell-wall structure instead of lowering
the membrane fluidity, H. werneckii can maintain high membrane
fluidity even at high salinities, which might be one of the factors enabling
its growth at decreased water availability.
| SENSING THE INCREASED OSMOLARITY - THE HOG SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION PATHWAY IN H. WERNECKII |
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Hortea werneckii's ability to adapt to a wide range of salinities
indicates the presence of an efficient system that can both sense and respond
to these changes. The existence of a signaling pathway similar to the S.
cerevisiae HOG pathway was demonstrated by identification of putative
sensor proteins HwSho1 and histidine kinase-like osmosensor HwHhk7, together
with two MAP kinases: MAPKK HwPbs2 and the final MAPK HwHog1
(Lenassi et al. 2007,
Turk & Plemenita
2002). We found that the genome of H. werneckii contains
one copy of the S. cerevisiae homologue gene for the osmosensor Sho1,
HwSHO1. When compared to other known Sho1 proteins, HwSho1 shows a
distinct membrane topology with inverted orientation, suggesting different
localisation of HwSho1. To obtain better insight into the role of the HwSho1,
the protein was expressed in S. cerevisiae sho1 mutant strain. We
demonstrated that the HwSho1 protein can rescue the osmosensitivity of the
S. cerevisiae sho1 mutant, despite its much lower binding affinity to
the scaffold protein Pbs2, when compared to the binding affinity of S.
cerevisiae Sho1 to Pbs2. It appears that the affinity of binding between
HwSho1 and Pbs2 depends not only on the SH3 domain at the C-terminus of
HwSho1, but also on the amino-acid sequence surrounding the domain. We also
assessed the salt-dependent gene expression and found that the expression of
HwSHO1 is only weakly salt-responsive. We proposed that a preferred
role of HwSho1 is in general cellular processes rather than in quick responses
to the changes in osmolarity (Lenassi, unpubl. data).
The genome of H. werneckii contains two copies of histidine kinase
genes with the putative role in osmosensing
(Lenassi & Plemenita
2007). As many of the H. werneckii genes that have so far
been associated with adaptation to high osmolarity are present in two copies
in the genome (Plemenita
&
Gunde-Cimerman 2005), perhaps the histidine kinase duplication
could be beneficial for H. werneckii living in environments with
fluctuations in salt concentration. A comparison of the translated nucleotide
sequence of the product from H. werneckii with the protein database
revealed a high homology with the histidine kinase ChHhk17 from
Cochliobolus heterostrophus. ChHhk17 and the related BfHhk17 of
Botryotinia fuckeliana are members of the group 7 of fungal histidine
kinases. The isolated genes from H. werneckii were therefore named
HwHHK7A and HwHHK7B. An inspection of the relative positions
of all fungal histidine kinase groups on a phylogenetic tree
(Catlett et al. 2003)
shows that histidine kinase Sln1 from S. cerevisiae and HK7 group
position close together, indicating late separation from a common ancestor.
The most obvious difference between the Sln1 and HK7 group, however, is the
intracellular localisation of the proteins. While histidine kinases of the
Sln1 group are membrane bound, histidine kinases from HK7 group are soluble,
cytosolic proteins. Since the secondary structure of some histidine kinases
are known, we could predict the secondary structures of the described domains
with a high degree of certainty. We confirmed that HwHhk7A and HwHhk7B
isoforms have all the regions necessary to function as eukaryotic hybrid-type
histidine kinases (Wolanin et al.
2002). No transmembrane domain could be predicted in the HwHhk7
proteins from H. werneckii, which distinguished them from the S.
cerevisiae Sln1 protein with two transmembrane domains.
Transcription of HwHHK7A gene was not very responsive to the
changes in NaCl concentration. In contrast, the expression of HwHHK7B
gene was highly salt-responsive, with higher levels of expression through the
whole range of salinities when compared to HwHHK7A gene expression.
Salt-dependent expression pattern of HwHHK7 indicated the existence
of two types of responses, an early response to hyposaline and a late response
to hypersaline stress (Lenassi &
Plemenita
2007). Our data suggest that the high induction
of HwHHK7B gene expression as an early response to hyposaline stress
could be the result of the specialised role of this histidine kinase in
response to conditions of modest osmolarity, as has already been demonstrated
for the Sln1 (O'Rourke & Herskowitz
2004). These results lead us to speculate that the role of isoform
HwHhk7B in the adaptation of H. werneckii is mostly in sensing and
adapting to the sudden changes of salinity, which are very common in this
organism's natural habitat.
The role of Sln1 in the HOG pathway is generally well studied and well evidenced (Hohmann 2002). By contrast, none of the HK7 group protein members has a known function. Interestingly, all other fungal species but H. werneckii, which code for HK group 7, are known as plant or human pathogens (Furukawa et al. 2005, Nemecek et al. 2006). The lifestyle of some plant pathogens has similarities with life in a high osmolarity environment, as they must also be able to adapt to fluctuating osmolarity when invading the victim organism (Han & Prade 2002). As controlling the osmotic response on the cellular level is of great importance to the pathogenicity of fungi, other HK7 group members could also have a role in osmosensing, as it was predicted for HwHhk7B in H. werneckii. The absence of hybrid histidine kinases from animals makes these proteins prominent antimicrobial targets (Santos & Shiozaki 2001), thus group 7 of HKs could present novel sites for the development of fungal inhibitors.
Both osmosensors, Sho1 and Sln1 proteins in S. cerevisiae transmit
the signals to the downstream MAP kinase cascade of the HOG signal
transduction pathway (Hohmann
2002). In H. werneckii, we found homologues of two MAP
kinases: HwPbs2 and HwHog1 (Turk &
Plemenita
2002). In S. cerevisiae, Pbs2 functions
both as a MAPK kinase and as a scaffold protein, which recruits multiple
proteins involved in the activation of the HOG pathway. Upon activation, Pbs2
then phosphorylates the target kinase Hog1
(Hohmann 2002). In H.
werneckii, we found two gene copies of HwPBS2 that are
transcribed and translated into three different isoforms: HwPbs2A, HwPbs2B1
and HwPbs2B2. The expression of HwPBS2A and HwPBS2B2
isoforms was increased 4-fold in the cells adapted to 4.5 M NaCI, whereas the
expression of HwPBS2B1 was not salt-responsive. As suggested with RNA
polymerase II-chromatin immunoprecipitation (RNAPol-ChIP) experiments and
promoter analysis, the higher steady-state concentration of HwPBS2A
transcript in respect to HwPBS2B2 is the consequence of the
activation of HwPBS2A gene transcription. The expression profiles of
HwPBS2 genes suggested the putative role of HwPbs2A and HwPbs2B2 in
response to quick adaptation to severe hyperosmotic shock, whereas the role of
HwPbs2B1 is in response to moderate stress adaptation (Lenassi, unpubl. data).
In contrast to S. cerevisiae, we showed that HwPbs2 proteins are not
only localised to the cytosol, but they also bind to the plasma membrane at
higher salinities (Turk &
Plemenita
2002). The HwPbs2 complemented the defect of the
S. cerevisiae pbs2 mutant strain only weakly. This could be explained
by the absence of the appropriate binding partners for the HwPbs2 isoforms in
S. cerevisiae and may indicate the existence of specialised roles of
multiple isoforms in the HOG signaling pathway of H. werneckii. This
explanation could be supported by our finding that HwPbs2 isoforms have a
conserved kinase domain, but a very diverse scaffold binding part.
Moving downstream through the cascade, we have also identified the S.
cerevisiae homologue of the key MAP kinase in H. werneckii -
HwHog1 (Turk & Plemenita
2002). As in S. cerevisiae, the genome of H.
werneckii contains only one copy of the HOG1 gene. The
HwHOG1 open reading frame encodes a protein of 359 amino-acid
residues with a predicted molecular weight of 46 kDa and with all of the
conserved regions that are specific for the MAPKs, such as the common docking
(CD) domain at the C-terminal end, a TGY phosphorylation motif at amino-acid
residues 171–173, and an Asp in the active site. The 3-dimensional model
of the full-length HwHog1 protein revealed an overall structural homology with
other known MAPKs (Turk &
Plemenita
2002,
Lenassi et al. 2007).
Although the HwHog1 protein shows high homology to the S. cerevisiae
Hog1, important differences in both activation and localisation of the
phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated forms of HwHog1 have been observed. An
in vitro kinase assay demonstrated that in contrast to S.
cerevisiae, where Hog1 is activated even at very low salt concentrations,
HwHog1 is fully active only at extremely high salt concentrations
(Turk & Plemenita
2002). HwHOG1 successfully complemented the S.
cerevisiae hog1 phenotype at increased osmolarity, caused by 1.0 M NaCl,
1.0 M KCl, or 1.5 M sorbitol. We demonstrated not only that the cells
expressing HwHog1 have restored tolerance to sodium and potassium ions and to
sorbitol, but also that the osmotolerance was restored only in the presence of
the MAPKK Pbs2 (Lenassi et al.
2007).
The HOG pathway has classically been considered as specific to osmotic stress. Recent studies have suggested that Hog1 can also be activated in response to heat shock, cold stress, oxidative stress, and UV injury (Gacto et al. 2003, Panadero et al. 2006). To test the response of HwHog1 to these alternative stresses, we analysed the growth ability of S. cerevisiae wild-type, hog1 and pbs2 strains expressing the HwHog1, after exposure to UV, high pH, H2O2, and low or high temperatures. We found that the activation of HwHog1 is less efficient in response to UV stress than in wild-type S. cerevisiae (Lenassi et al. 2007). However, when both yeasts were exposed to UV irradiation, H. werneckii was much more resistant to UV than S. cerevisiae (Turk, unpublished). As melanin is a well-known UV protectant, we can speculate that it is responsible for high viability in melanised H. werneckii, and therefore, we can also conclude that the activation of the HOG signaling pathway might not be involved in the UV stress response in H. werneckii. In contrast, the HOG signaling pathway is important for the oxidative stress in H. werneckii cells. S. cerevisiae cells expressing HwHog1 are much more resistant to H2O2 than wild-type cells. Furthermore, this phenotype depends on the presence of the MAPKK Pbs2. The ability of H. werneckii to combat oxidative stress has recently been addressed again, using hydrogen peroxide as the reactive oxygen species (ROS)-generating compound. Exposure to H2O2 resulted in a decrease in H. werneckii viability at extremely high salt concentrations, suggesting that the level of ROS degradation and resistance determine the upper limits of the salt tolerance of H. werneckii (Petrovic 2006). HwHog1 also appears to mediate the response to high-temperature, but not low-temperature stresses. Amongst all tested stresses, only the heat-shock response is independent of the Pbs2 protein (Lenassi et al. 2007). These data suggest that heat-shock signals that activate HwHog1 are transmitted via a pathway distinct from the classical HOG pathway, in which this MAPK and the scaffold protein Pbs2 have crucial roles. High temperature is stressful for H. werneckii, as has been shown by ecological studies. So far only a few strains of H. werneckii with optimal growth at 32°C were isolated, while the majority typically prefers lower environmental temperatures (Cantrell et al. 2006). Activation of HwHog1 could be of general importance in regulating the transcription of the gene set that is involved in combating high-temperature stress. In contrast, H. werneckii seems to be more adapted to lower temperatures and therefore HwHog1 is not activated upon low-temperature exposure. Likewise, the exposure of cells to elevated pH turned out not to be connected to HOG pathway activation (Lenassi et al. 2007).
| RESPONDING TO INCREASED OSMOLARITY BY DIFFERENTIAL GENE EXPRESSION |
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& Plemenita
2007). The transcriptional induction or repression of
approximately 500 genes in S. cerevisiae that are strongly responsive
to salt stress was highly or fully dependent on the MAPK Hog1, indicating that
the Hog1-mediated signaling pathway plays a key role in global gene regulation
under saline stress conditions (Posas
et al. 2000, O'Rourke
& Herskowitz 2004). We approached the study of a possible
interaction of endogenous HwHog1 with the chromatin regions of identified
up-regulated genes in optimal salinity- or hypersaline-adapted H.
werneckii cells by a chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay. Lacking
the information about promoter regions for the identified
differentially-expressed genes in H. werneckii, a ChIP-coding region
PCR amplification was performed
(Vaupoti
& Plemenita
2007). Recently, it has been shown that the activated Hog1 in
S. cerevisiae is associated with elongating RNA polymerase II and is
therefore recruited to the entire coding region of osmoinducible genes
(Proft et al. 2006).
HwHog1 cross-linked with the coding region of 36 of the differentially
expressed genes. For 34 up-regulated genes, the interaction with HwHog1 was
stronger in cells adapted to 4.5 M NaCl, whereas for 2 down-regulated genes
the HwHog1-ChIP signal was stronger in cells adapted to 3 M NaCl, showing not
only the transcriptional induction but also the transcriptional repression by
HwHog1 (Vaupoti
&
Plemenita
2007). Genome-wide expression profiling studies
using wild-type and hog1 mutant S. cerevisiae cells were
performed to comparatively identify genes whose upregulation of expression was
dependent on Hog1 (Yale & Bohnert
2001, O'Rourke &
Herskowitz 2004, Proft et
al. 2006). Only the UGP1 orthologue was also induced
in H. werneckii cells adapted to 4.5 M NaCl and in cells exposed to a
sudden change in salinity. However, in contrast to S. cerevisiae,
upregulation of HwUGP1 turned out to be independent of HwHog1
(Vaupoti
& Plemenita
2007). Other HwHog1-ChIP positive genes in H. werneckii
were reported for the first time in connection with MAPK Hog1 by our study,
reflecting the complexity of HOG signaling pathway. The relative distribution
of HwHog1-dependent genes was approximately equivalent among functional
categories, except for transcription, cellular transport, signal transduction
mechanism, and cell fate functional categories, where the HwHog1-ChIP positive
genes represented more than 70 % fraction of tested genes. Only 2 of 10 tested
genes with unknown function (SOL23 and SOL28) were
HwHog1-ChIP positive.
|
& Plemenita
2007). The co-localisation of HwHog1 and
RNA polymerase II existed in 17 out of 36 HwHog1-ChiP positive differentially
expressed genes. Co-occupation of HwHog1 and RNA polymerase II on target genes
resulted in an increased PCR signal in SeqChIP with the accompanying increased
level of corresponding transcript in RT-PCR analyses. These observations
indicate a stimulating role for HwHog1 and RNA polymerase II co-localisation
on the efficiency of transcription of indicated genes in high-salt adapted
H. werneckii and reflect HwHog1-RNAPolII-chromatin interactions,
relevant for the extremely hypersaline conditions, which have so far not been
studied in salt-sensitive organisms. Based on our results and in comparison
with S. cerevisiae, we built the model of HOG signaling pathway in
H. werneckii, which is shown in
Fig. 1. | CONCLUSIONS |
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Our studies confirmed the important role of the HOG signaling pathway in the osmoadaptation and in the stress response of H. werneckii. This pathway is activated not only in response to hyperosmotic stress, but also to oxidative and heat stress, both typical for solar salterns. At high salt concentrations, the induction of a completely different set of osmoresponsive genes was observed in H. werneckii when compared to salt-sensitive S. cerevisiae. Most of these are novel in terms of their interaction with the major transcriptional regulator HwHog1, the mitogen-activated protein kinase of the HOG signaling pathway. Moreover, in H. werneckii, HwHog1 mediates not only the early phase of the osmotic induction of many osmo-responsive genes, but it also supports a high RNA-polymerase II-dependent elongation rate of target genes in long-term-adapted cells growing at extremely high salinities. Our studies revealed distinct molecular mechanisms in sensing and responding to changes in environmental osmolarity in H. werneckii when compared to the conventional model yeasts, such as salt-sensitive S. cerevisiae and moderately halotolerant D. hansenii. Differences in protein structure, different intracellular localisation of the components, which are involved in signal transduction, and multiple gene copies, are crucial for these adaptations.
Since salt stress is an increasing threat to agriculture in many productive
areas of the world, it is important to bridge the gap between salt toxicity in
plants and knowledge of molecular mechanisms of adaptation in extremely
halotolerant model eukaryotic cells. Our studies showed that H.
werneckii is also a promising source of salt tolerant transgenes for
agriculture. We identified and characterised two novel isoforms of
3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphatases or Hal2-like proteins from H.
werneckii. Overexpression of both isoenzymes, HwHal2A and HwHal2B from a
low copy number vector in S. cerevisiae remarkably increased its
halotolerance (Vaupoti
et
al. 2007).
Taken together, an interplaying array of adaptational mechanisms at different levels make H. werneckii a very versatile halophile, which is able to grow at a broader salinity range than most known microorganisms. Our findings contribute an important advance in understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying the adaptive response of H. werneckii, an increasingly useful model organism for studying the mechanisms of salt tolerance in eukaryotic cells.
| Acknowledgments |
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