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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Sep 1995, 3316-3322, Vol 61, No. 9
MP Whitehead, MT Shieh, TE Cleveland, JW Cary and RA Dean
Two genes, pecA and pecB, encoding endopolyglacturonases were cloned from a
highly aggressive strain of Aspergillus flavus. The pecA gene consisted of
1,228 bp encoding a protein of 363 amino acids with a predicted molecular
mass of 37.6 kDa, interrupted by two introns of 58 and 81 bp in length.
Accumulation of pecA mRNA in both pectin- or glucose-grown mycelia in the
highly aggressive strain matched the activity profile of a pectinase
previously identified as P2c. Transformants of a weakly aggressive strain
containing a functional copy of the pecA gene produced P2c in vitro,
confirming that pecA encodes P2c. The coding region of pecB was determined
to be 1,217 bp in length interrupted by two introns of 65 and 54 bp in
length. The predicted protein of 366 amino acids had an estimated molecular
mass of 38 kDa. Transcripts of this gene accumulated in mycelia grown in
medium containing pectin alone, never in mycelia grown in
glucose-containing medium, for both highly and weakly aggressive strains.
Thus, pecB encodes the activity previously identified as P1 or P3. pecA and
pecB share a high degree of sequence identity with polygalacturonase genes
from Aspergillus parasiticus and Aspergillus oryzae, further establishing
the close relationships between members of the A. flavus group.
Conservation of intron positions in these genes also indicates that they
share a common ancestor with genes encoding endopolyglacturonases of
Aspergillus niger.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Isolation and characterization of polygalacturonase genes (pecA and pecB) from Aspergillus flavus
Department of Plant Pathology and Physiology, Clemson University, South Carolina 29634-0377, USA.
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