3.8 Article

Transcription of a nitrate reductase gene isolated from the symbiotic basidiomycete fungus Hebeloma cylindrosporum does not require induction by nitrate

Journal

MOLECULAR AND GENERAL GENETICS
Volume 263, Issue 6, Pages 948-956

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/PL00008695

Keywords

nitrate reductase; nitrogen regulation; mycorrhiza; Hebeloma; basidiomycete

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Ectomycorrhizal fungi contribute to the nitrogen nutrition of their host plants, but no information is available on the molecular control of their nitrogen metabolism. The cloning and pattern of transcriptional regulation of two nitrate reductase genes of the symbiotic basidiomycete Hebeloma cylindrosporum are presented. The genomic copy of one of these genes (nar1) was entirely sequenced; the coding region is interrupted by 12 introns. The nar1 gene, which is transcribed and codes for a putative 908-amino acid polypeptide complemented nitrate reductase-deficient mutants of H. cylindrosporum upon transformation, thus demonstrating that the gene is functional. The second gene (nar2), for which no mRNA transcripts were detected, is considered to be an ancestral, non-functional duplication of nar1. In a 462-nt partial sequence of nar2 two introns were identified at positions identical to those of introns 8 and 9 of nar1, although their respective nucleotide sequences were highly divergent; the exon sequences were much more conserved. In wild-type strains, transcription of nar1 is repressed in the presence of a high concentration of ammonium. High levels of transcription are observed in the presence of either very low nitrogen concentrations or high concentrations of nitrate or organic N sources such as urea, glycine or serine. This indicates that in H. cylindrosporum, in contrast to all nitrophilous organisms studied so far, an exogenous supply of nitrate is not required to induce transcription of a nitrate reductase gene. In contrast, repression by ammonium suggests the existence of a wide-domain regulatory gene, as already characterized in ascomycete species.

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