posted on 2021-09-30, 19:44authored byWenhui Wei, Faxiu Lan, Yinghang Liu, Lianghuan Wu, Bachar H. Hassan, Shihua Wang
Biotin
is an important enzyme cofactor that plays a key role in
all three domains. The classical bifunctional enzyme BioDA in eukaryotes
(such as Aspergillus flavus and Arabidopsis thaliana) is involved in the antepenultimate
and penultimate steps of biotin biosynthesis. In this study, we identified
a A. flavus bifunctional gene bioDA which could complement both Escherichia
coli ΔEcbioD and ΔEcbioA mutants. Interestingly, the separated domain of AfBioD
and AfBioA could, respectively, fuse with EcBioA and EcBioD well and
work together. What is more, we found that BioDA was almost localized
to the mitochondria in A. flavus, as
shown by N-terminal red fluorescent protein tag fusion. Noteworthy,
the subcellular localization of AfBioDA is never affected by common
environmental stresses (such as hyperosmotic stress or oxidative stress).
The knockout strategy demonstrated that the deletion of AfbioDA gene from the chromosome impaired the biotin de novo synthesis pathway in A. flavus. Importantly,
this A. flavus mutant blocked biotin
production and decreased its pathogenicity to infect peanuts. Based
on the structural comparison, we found that two inhibitors (amiclenomycin
and gemcitabine) could be candidates for antifungal drugs. Taken together,
our findings identified the bifunctional AfbioDA gene
and shed light on biotin biosynthesis in A. flavus.