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The Translocation-Associated Tox1 Locus of Cochliobolus heterostrophus Is Two Genetic Elements on Two Different Chromosomes
M. Kodama1,a, M. S. Rose2,a, G. Yanga, S. H. Yuna, O. C. Yodera, and B. G. Turgeonaa Department of Plant Pathology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853
Corresponding author: B. G. Turgeon, Department of Plant Pathology, 334 Plant Science Bldg., Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853., bgt1{at}cornell.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: R. H. DAVIS
| ABSTRACT |
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Previously, Tox1 was defined as a single genetic element controlling the difference between races of Cochliobolus heterostrophus: race T is highly virulent on T-cytoplasm corn and produces the polyketide T-toxin; race O is weakly virulent and does not produce T-toxin. Here we report that Tox1 is two loci, Tox1A and Tox1B, on two different chromosomes. Evidence for two loci derives from: (1) the appearance of 25% Tox+ progeny in crosses between induced Tox1- mutants, one defective at Tox1A, the other at Tox1B; (2) the ability of Tox1A- + Tox1B- heterokaryons to complement for T-toxin production; and (3) electrophoretic karyotypes proving that Tox1- mutations are physically located on two different chromosomes. Data showing Tox1 as a single genetic element are reconciled with those proving it is two loci by the fact that Tox1 is inseparably linked to the breakpoints of a reciprocal translocation; the translocation results in a four-armed linkage group. In crosses where the translocation is heterozygous (i.e., race T by race O), all markers linked to the four-armed intersection appear linked to each other; in crosses between induced Tox1- mutants, complications due to the translocation are eliminated and the two loci segregate independently.
TWO races of Cochliobolus heterostrophus, the cause of Southern Corn Leaf Blight, are known: race T produces a polyketide (T-toxin) that specifically affects corn containing Texas male sterile (T) cytoplasm and is highly virulent on T-cytoplasm corn, whereas race O does not produce T-toxin and lacks high virulence to T-cytoplasm corn (![]()
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Despite the simple inheritance pattern, certain observations have suggested that Tox1 is not a typical Mendelian element. Comparison of nonviable ascospore frequencies in crosses homozygous vs. heterozygous at Tox1 led to the proposal that races T and O differ by a reciprocal translocation (Figure 1A), the breakpoints of which are genetically inseparable from Tox1 (![]()
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As an entrée into molecular analysis of Tox1, we generated a series of mutants deficient in production of T-toxin. Some of these were induced by chemical mutagenesis (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Fungal strains, growth conditions, and mating:
C. heterostrophus strains used in this study are listed in Table 1. Fungal growth media included complete (CM), minimal (MM), and CMX, which is CM with xylose instead of glucose (![]()
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Preparation of chromosomal DNA:
Protoplasts were prepared by growing and digesting mycelium as described earlier (![]()
CHEF gel electrophoresis:
Chromosomal DNAs were separated by contour-clamped homogeneous electric field (CHEF) electrophoresis (![]()
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DNA-DNA hybridization:
Capillary transfer of DNA from gels to Nytran Plus membranes (Schleicher and Schuell, Keene, NH) was done according to the manufacturer's instructions. DNA probes (Table 2) were labeled with
-[32P]dCTP using standard random priming techniques (![]()
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Heterokaryon formation:
Strains carrying the auxotrophic markers ade1 and met2, denoting requirements for adenine and methionine, respectively, were crossed to each mutant and recombinant Tox1- auxotrophic progeny were used to form heterokaryons. Blocks of CM bearing mycelium and conidia of strains with different auxotrophic markers were paired on MM at 23° as described previously (![]()
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T-toxin assay:
For uniform cell overlay in the microbial bioassay for T-toxin (![]()
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| RESULTS |
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Tox1 is two loci: genetic analyses:
Linkage among Tox1- mutations:
We reported previously that the restriction enzyme-mediated integration (REMI)-induced tagged mutations in Tox- strains R.C4.186 and R.C4.350L both map at the Tox1 locus (![]()
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Heterokaryon analysis: To further examine the nonallelic nature of mutations at Tox1, heterokaryons were formed between all possible pairs of auxotrophic T-toxin-deficient mutants (Table 1) and then examined for T-toxin production (Figure 3, Table 4). The amount of T-toxin produced by race T/race T heterokaryons was the same as that produced by race T/race O heterokaryons. Race O/race O heterokaryons did not produce T-toxin. All heterokaryons formed between race T and the four induced Tox1- mutants produced T-toxin, in amounts comparable to the race T/race T heterokaryons. None of the heterokaryons formed between race O and the four induced Tox1- mutants produced detectable T-toxin. This result makes it seem unlikely that the race O nucleus has functional genes necessary to complement mutations in the race T nucleus that cause a Tox- phenotype.
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Heterokaryons formed between two pairs of Tox1- mutants (ctm45/C4.PKS.13 and R.C4.350L/C4.PKS.13) produced halos about the same size as the halo of the control heterokaryon formed by two wild-type race T auxotrophs, demonstrating that the defects in ctm45 and R.C4.350L can be complemented by products of the C4.PKS13 nucleus and the defect in C4.PKS.13 can be complemented by products of either the ctm45 or R.C4.350L nucleus. This is consistent with the hypothesis that the C4.PKS.13 mutation is at a locus different from that of the ctm45 and R.C4.350L mutations. Heterokaryons formed between another pair of mutants (R.C4.186/C4.PKS.13) produced only a small amount of T-toxin, evident as a tiny halo in the E. coli assay (Figure 3, Table 4). Other heterokaryons formed between induced mutant pairs produced no detectable T-toxin. Results remained unchanged when auxotrophic markers were reversed in the strains used to make heterokaryons.
Lack of a difference in sizes of halos produced by race T/race O and race T/race T heterokaryons suggests that the race O nucleus does not encode enzymes for metabolism of T-toxin. However, the data in Table 4 and Figure 3 represent a single time point and do not rule out differences in T-toxin accumulation at other points during the production time course. Thus, T-toxin in culture was quantified over a 25-day incubation period (Figure 4). At most points up to the plateau of the curve, T-toxin production by heterokaryons was less than wild type, probably because heterokaryons grow on MM at a slightly slower rate than wild type. Differences in T-toxin production among heterokaryons could not be detected with this assay, even though race T/race O heterokaryons are expected (![]()
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Tox1 is two loci: physical analysis:
Chromosomes of race T strain C4, race O strain C5, and three Tox1- mutants were separated by CHEF gel electrophoresis under conditions that resolve large-to-intermediate-size fragments. The karyotypes of C4 and the three mutants derived from C4 appeared identical, with two exceptions (Figure 5A): (1) Chromosome 6;12 (open arrowhead, lane 13) of mutant C4.PKS.13 migrated slightly faster than the corresponding chromosome in C4 (lane C4), suggesting a deletion, and (2) two novel chromosomes were evident in mutant R.C4.186 (lane 186, arrow and asterisk); moreover, the largest band, which contains C4 chromosomes 2 and 3 (Figure 2), was fainter in the mutant. No karyotype variability was observed between C4 (lane C4) and R.C4.350L (lane 350).
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To identify the tagged chromosome in each Tox1- mutant and thus physically locate the Tox1- mutations, the gel was blotted and probed with labeled transformation vector. The hybridizing chromosome was a different size in each mutant (Figure 5B). To determine which chromosomes hybridized, two RFLP probes, B88 and B160 (Table 2; ![]()
Chromosome rearrangements at Tox1A and Tox1B:
Since chromosomes carrying Tox1 in mutants C4.PKS.13 (Tox1B-) and R.C4.186 (Tox1A-) appear rearranged (Figure 5), they were examined further using additional chromosome-specific probes. Previous gels (Figure 5A) showed that the largest chromosomal band in R.C4.186 was faint, suggesting absence of a chromosome normally found in this band; RFLP probes B264 and G172, which are specific to chromosomes 2 and 3, respectively, were used to determine if either of these chromosomes was rearranged. The largest band in C4, C5, and C4.PKS.13 hybridized to chromosome 2-specific probe B264 (Figure 6A and Figure C); in R.C4.186 it hybridized to the larger of the two new chromosomes (Figure 6A and Figure C, lane 186, arrow). Chromosome 3-specific probe G172 hybridized to the largest band, which was the same size in all strains (Figure 6D). Combined use of these two probes indicates that chromosome 2, and not chromosome 3, is altered in R.C4.186.
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Probes specific to chromosomes 5 (G214, Figure 6G), 1 (G38, Figure 6E) and 7 (G144, not shown) detected no polymorphisms, indicating that these chromosomes are normal in all the Tox1- mutants. Under these running conditions, the smaller size of chromosome 6;12 in C4.PKS.13, relative to C4 (Figure 5), was not obvious, as shown by the B88 probe (Figure 6H); however, under the separation conditions illustrated in Figure 5C (lanes C4 and 13) and Figure 7A and Figure B (lanes C4 and 13), the difference is clear.
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Chromosome 12;6-specific probe B160 hybridized to the larger of the two new chromosomes in R.C4.186 (Figure 6A and Figure F, lane 186, arrow; see also Figure 5D, lane 186). Elsewhere, we determined that a 0.7-kb HindIII/BamHI DNA fragment (unique to chromosome 2 in wild type) flanks the plasmid insertion point in R.C4.186 (![]()
C4.PKS.13 deletion size estimated by chromosome polymorphism:
To investigate the difference in size of chromosome 6;12 in C4.PKS.13 compared with other strains, chromosomes of C5, C4, C4.PKS.13, and R.C4.186 were separated using running conditions appropriate for intermediate-sized fragments, and the gel was blotted and probed with the chromosome 6;12-specific marker B88. Hybridization with the B88 probe revealed, as noted in Figure 5, that chromosome 6;12 of C4.PKS.13 was smaller than its wild-type C4 counterpart (Figure 7A, lane 13, arrow). Probing with a second chromosome 6;12-specific probe, G349 (Figure 7B), located on the opposite side of the translocation breakpoint (Figure 1B), indicated the same difference in size. Comparisons with chromosome size standards (not shown) indicated a difference of ~100 kb. Figure 8 presents a graphic summary of electrophoretic karyotypes of wild-type and mutant C. heterostrophus strains.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Early genetic analyses established that the essential difference between races T and O of C. heterostrophus is controlled by Tox1 (![]()
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Tagged mutations at Tox1A and Tox1B have led to the cloning of genes involved in T-toxin biosynthesis: PKS1, encoding a polyketide synthase (![]()
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Results of heterokaryon tests are consistent with those of progeny segregation analyses and with the observations of gel-separated chromosomes, i.e, mutants defective at Tox1A will complement the T-toxin deficiency in a Tox1B mutant and vice versa, whereas mutants defective at the same Tox1 locus do not complement for T-toxin production. The outcome of these experiments is precisely what would be predicted if Tox1 were two different loci. An unexpected result is the poor complementation between R.C4.186 (defective at Tox1A) and C4.PKS.13 (defective at Tox1B). Normal complementation was expected because Tox1A in C4.PKS.13 is fully functional, i.e., C4.PKS.13 complements R.C4.350L and ctm45 to produce wild-type halos, and Tox1B in R.C4.186 is fully functional, i.e., 25% of the progeny from the cross R.C4.186 x C4.PKS.13 are Tox+ (Table 3). Thus, it is difficult to explain the R.C4.186/C4. PKS.13 result, because between them this pair of mutants contributes fully functional Tox1A and Tox1B loci to the heterokaryon. One possibility is that the DNA deleted at Tox1A in R.C4.186 contains a gene required for regulation of genes at Tox1B. This hypothetical regulatory gene would be intact in C4.PKS.13, but in R.C4.186/C4.PKS.13 heterokaryons its product (a transcription factor?) would need to move to the R.C4.186 nucleus so that Tox1B genes could be induced; if movement were inefficient, expression of genes at Tox1B would be suboptimal and this could explain why little T-toxin is synthesized. In heterokaryons between C4.PKS.13 and either ctm45 or R.C4.350L (neither of which appears to be deleted at Tox1A), both component nuclei would encode the putative transcription factor, obviating the need for it to move from one nucleus to the other. Although the existence of a regulatory gene is speculative at this point, the idea is consistent with our observation that a full-length functional clone of PKS1 does not complement T-toxin deficiency when transformed into R.C4.186, indicating additional genes at Tox1A required for T-toxin production (X. ZHU, B. G. TURGEON and O. C. YODER, unpublished results). A host-specific toxin regulatory gene (TOXE) encoding a protein with a bZIP basic DNA-binding domain and four ankyrin repeats has been identified in C. carbonum race 1; the protein is required for toxin biosynthesis (![]()
Earlier heterokaryon analyses suggested that genes determining race T are dominant to their counterparts in race O (![]()
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Evidence that the Tox1 locus is complex, both genetically and physically, extends beyond the facts that (1) it is located on two different chromosomes and (2) the 1.2 Mb of "extra" DNA in race T maps at Tox1. The Tox1 region appears to have an unusual amount of repetitive DNA, since half the probes mapping within 4 cM of Tox1 are repetitive, in contrast to only ~4% repetitive probes in the remainder of the genome (![]()
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An additional level of complexity at C. heterostrophus Tox1 is that both Tox1A and Tox1B appear to be gene clusters. This deduction is based on the observation (described above) that a full-length functional clone of PKS1 will not complement T-toxin deficiency when transformed into mutant R.C4.186, which sustained a large Tox1A deletion (Figure 8), and the decarboxylase-encoding gene will not complement T-toxin deficiency when transformed into Tox1B-deletion mutant C4.PKS.13 (X. ZHU, B. G. TURGEON and O. C. YODER, unpublished results). These results suggest that there are additional genes, as yet undiscovered, at both Tox1A and Tox1B that are necessary for T-toxin biosynthesis. The number of genes in each cluster and their functions remain to be determined.
| FOOTNOTES |
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This report is dedicated to the memory of Dr. Ge Yang, our friend and colleague, whose creativity established the intellectual framework for this study. ![]()
1 Present address: Laboratory of Plant Pathology, Faculty of Agriculture, Tottori University, 680 Tottori, Japan. ![]()
2 Present address: Novartis Seeds, Seeds Biotechnology Research Unit, 3054 Cornwallis Rd., Research Triangle Park, Raleigh, NC 27709. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture National Research Initiative (NRI) Program (O.C.Y. and B.G.T.) and the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan (M.K.).
Manuscript received July 13, 1998; Accepted for publication October 30, 1998.
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