4.7 Article

Fungal X-Intrinsic Protein Aquaporin from Trichoderma atroviride: Structural and Functional Considerations

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom11020338

Keywords

aquaporin; uncharacterized X-Intrinsic proteins; Trichoderma atroviride; 3D modeling; chlamydospores; pentose phosphate pathway; stress responses

Funding

  1. I-SITE CAP 20-25 (ANR grant) Emergence 2017 from the University of Clermont-Auvergne [16-IDEX-0001]
  2. PHC program Uthic from Campus France under the Tunisian Ministry of Foreign Affairs [34861PF]
  3. PHC program Uthic from Campus France under French Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research [34861PF]

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The study focuses on the diversity and structure of the fungal uncharacterized X-Intrinsic Protein (XIP) subfamily in Trichoderma atroviride, exploring their roles in development, biomass accumulation, and mycoparasitic activities. The research sheds light on the function of the XIP subfamily and their impact on the physiological integrity of the fungus.
The major intrinsic protein (MIP) superfamily is a key part of the fungal transmembrane transport network. It facilitates the transport of water and low molecular weight solutes across biomembranes. The fungal uncharacterized X-Intrinsic Protein (XIP) subfamily includes the full protein diversity of MIP. Their biological functions still remain fully hypothetical. The aim of this study is still to deepen the diversity and the structure of the XIP subfamily in light of the MIP counterparts-the aquaporins (AQPs) and aquaglyceroporins (AQGPs)-and to describe for the first time their function in the development, biomass accumulation, and mycoparasitic aptitudes of the fungal bioagent Trichoderma atroviride. The fungus-XIP Glade, with one member (TriatXIP), is one of the three clades of MIPs that make up the diversity of T. atroviride MIPs, along with the AQPs (three members) and the AQGPs (three members). TriatXIP resembles those of strict aquaporins, predicting water diffusion and possibly other small polar solutes due to particularly wider ar/R constriction with a Lysine substitution at the LE2 position. The XIP loss of function in Delta TriatXIP mutants slightly delays biomass accumulation but does not impact mycoparasitic activities. Delta TriatMIP forms colonies similar to wild type; however, the hyphae are slightly thinner and colonies produce rare chlamydospores in PDA and specific media, most of which are relatively small and exhibit abnormal morphologies. To better understand the molecular causes of these deviant phenotypes, a wide-metabolic survey of the ATriatXIPs demonstrates that the delayed growth kinetic, correlated to a decrease in respiration rate, is caused by perturbations in the pentose phosphate pathway. Furthermore, the null expression of the XIP gene strongly impacts the expression of four expressed MIP-encoding genes of T. atroviride, a plausible compensating effect which safeguards the physiological integrity and life cycle of the fungus. This paper offers an overview of the fungal XIP family in the biocontrol agent T. atroviride which will be useful for further functional analysis of this particular MIP subfamily in vegetative growth and the environmental stress response in fungi. Ultimately, these findings have implications for the ecophysiology of Trichoderma spp. in natural, agronomic, and industrial systems.

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