Publication: Identification of catalase as an early up-regulated gene in Beauveria bassiana and its role in entomopathogenic fungal virulence
Issued Date
2013-11-01
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ISSN
10499644
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2-s2.0-84883442967
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Mahidol University
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SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Biological Control. Vol.67, No.2 (2013), 85-93
Suggested Citation
Duriya Chantasingh, Supattra Kitikhun, Nemat O. Keyhani, Katewadee Boonyapakron, Honglada Thoetkiattikul, Kusol Pootanakit, Lily Eurwilaichitr Identification of catalase as an early up-regulated gene in Beauveria bassiana and its role in entomopathogenic fungal virulence. Biological Control. Vol.67, No.2 (2013), 85-93. doi:10.1016/j.biocontrol.2013.08.004 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/30959
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Title
Identification of catalase as an early up-regulated gene in Beauveria bassiana and its role in entomopathogenic fungal virulence
Abstract
The ability of entomopathogenic fungi to infect insects is a complex process involving differential expression of numerous genes some of which are up-regulated when the fungus is in contact with or exposed to insect cuticles. In this report, we identified a set of differentially expressed genes in the entomopathogenic fungus Beauveria bassiana BCC2659 in response to Spodoptera exigua larvae. PCR-select suppression subtractive hybridization (PCR-SSH) was used to identify genes differentially expressed during the initial aspects of the fungal-insect interaction, i.e. up to a 2h post-infection model. Ten fungal genes identified by PCR-SHH were confirmed to be up-regulated by semi-quantitative RT-PCR. Of these genes, a catalase (catE7), implicated in stress resistance, was chosen for further characterization in order to probe its role in B. bassiana pathogenesis and to determine whether over-expression would result in a more virulent strain. To investigate this, a transgenic B. bassiana strain, overexpressing CatE7 was constructed. Fungal transformant lines with extra catE7 copies (Bb::BbcatE7) showed ~2-fold higher catalase activity than the wild type. Bb::BbcatE7 strains germinated faster than the wild-type parent and exhibited significantly higher virulence against S. exigua larvae. Although the Bb::BbcatE7 strains were no better than wild type in terms of vegetative growth in the presence of exogenous H2O2concentrations, conidial germination rates were higher in the Bb::BbcatE7 strain in the presence of H2O2. These results suggest that responses mediated by catalases play an important role in the fungal-insect infection process and the manipulation of catalase expression can lead to more effective fungal strains for insect control. © 2013 Elsevier Inc.