The homeobox transcription factor HbxB coordinates distinct gene regulatory networks for asexual development and secondary metabolism in Aspergillus nidulans

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Abstract

Formation of conidia as asexual spores and sometimes worldwide distribution through the air is a very important feature of the fungal life style. This process is controlled by several regulatory proteins, including homeobox domain transcription factors. HbxB is one such regulator with implications in the control of development, secondary metabolism and various stress responses in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans . However, the molecular mechanism of the regulatory role of HbxB during asexual development is still elusive. Here we show that HbxB is a nuclear localized protein with great impact on asexual sporogenesis. Employment of high throughput assays like chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP-seq) and transcriptomics (RNA-seq), elucidated the in vivo binding landscape of HbxB in a genome-wide scale. A set of 238 genes as direct targets of HbxB were identified. A nine bases DNA motif where HbxB prefers to bind in vivo was discovered as HbxB response element (HRE). HbxB is influencing the expression of genes encoding master regulators of the asexual development such as SclB, PpoC, FlbA and FlbC. Moreover, the direct transcriptional control of the secondary metabolites sterigmatocystin and emericellamides biosynthesis by HbxB was discovered. Lastly also a previously elusive mutual regulatory control circuit between HbxB and two major regulators of the asexual development SclB and MsnA was found. Both of these regulators can directly induce the expression of hbxB . This study provides a detailed molecular mechanism on how HbxB controls A. nidulans asexual sporulation.

Importance

Fungal distribution mainly relies on the formation of spores that are subsequently dispersed in different media to ensure colonization of substrates and the survival of the fungus. The asexual developmental program is a widely used strategy in the fungal kingdom for production of spores (conidia). The HbxB transcription factor is a nuclear localized, h omeo b o x domain protein, with a strong impact on asexual sporulation of presumably numerous fungal species. This study enhances our understanding of the mechanism with which HbxB exerts its regulatory actions. HbxB is binding in vivo to specific DNA regulatory elements of genes encoding proteins with key roles in asexual development (like SclB, MsnA and PpoC), secondary metabolism (such as genes from the sterigmatocystin and emericellamide clusters) and stress response/tolerance. Overall, these findings open a window into how Hbx regulators orchestrate and coordinate fungal asexual developmental programs genome-wide at the molecular level.

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