G‑Protein Coupled Receptor Gpr‑1 Is Important
for the Growth and Nutritional Metabolism of an Invasive Bark Beetle
Symbiont Fungi Leptographium procerum
Posted on 2024-01-17 - 13:33
Leptographium procerum has been
demonstrated to play important roles in the invasive success of red
turpentine beetle (RTB), one of the most destructive invasive pests
in China. Our previous studies found that bacterial volatile ammonia
plays an important role in the maintenance of the RTB-L. procerum invasive complex. In this study, we found
a GPCR gene Gpr-1 that was a response to ammonia
but not involved in the ammonia-induced carbohydrate metabolism. Deletion
of Gpr-1 significantly inhibited the growth and pathogenicity
but thickened the cell wall of L. procerum, resulting in more resistance to cell wall-perturbing agents. Further
analyses suggested that Gpr-1 deletion caused growth
defects that might be due to the dysregulation of the amino acid and
lipid metabolisms. The thicker cell wall in the ΔGpr-1 mutant was induced through the cell wall remodeling process. Our
results indicated that Gpr-1 is essential for the
growth of L. procerum by regulating
the nutritional metabolism, which can be further explored for potential
applications in the management of RTB.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Ye, Fangyuan; Kang, Zhiwei; Kou, Hongru; Yang, Yunwen; Chen, Wei; Wang, Saige; et al. (2024). G‑Protein Coupled Receptor Gpr‑1 Is Important
for the Growth and Nutritional Metabolism of an Invasive Bark Beetle
Symbiont Fungi Leptographium procerum. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.3c07547