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Revista argentina de microbiología

versión impresa ISSN 0325-7541versión On-line ISSN 1851-7617

Rev. argent. microbiol. vol.51 no.4 Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires dic. 2019

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ram.2018.07.003 

MICROBIOLOGÍA BÁSICA

The bZIP transcription factor Afap1 mediates the oxidative stress response and aflatoxin biosynthesis in Aspergillus flavus

El factor de transcripción bZIP Afap1 afecta al estrés oxidativo y la biosíntesis de aflatoxinas en Aspergillus flavus

Xuanli Guana 

Yueju Zhaoa 

Xiao Liua 

Bo Shanga 

Fuguo Xinga 

Lu Zhoua 

Yan Wanga 

Chushu Zhanga  b 

Deepak Bhatnagarc  * 

Yang Liua  * 

aInstitute of Food Science and Technology, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Key Laboratory of Agro-products Quality and Safety Control in Storage and Transport Process, Ministry of Agriculture, Beijing 100193, PR China

bShandong Peanut Research Institute, Qingdao 266100, China

cFood and Feed Safety Research, USDA/ARS, Southern Regional Research Institute, New Orleans, LA 70124, USA

Abstract

Aflatoxin is a carcinogenic secondary metabolite produced mainly by Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus, which can seriously endanger the health of humans and animals. Oxidative stress is a common defense response, and it is known that reactive oxygen species (ROS) can induce the synthesis of a series of secondary metabolites, including aflatoxin. By using mutants lacking the afap 1 gene, the role of afap 1 gene in oxidative stress and aflatoxin synthesis was assessed. The growth of the mutant strains was significantly inhibited by the increase in the concentration of H2O2, inhibition was complete at 40mmol/l. However, in the quantitative analysis by HPLC, the concentration of AFB1 increased with the increased H 2O 2 until 10mmol/l. Following an analysis based on the information provided by the NCBI BLAST analysis, it was assumed that Afap1, a basic leucine zipper (bZIP) transcription factor, was associated with the oxidative stress in this fungus. Treatment with 5mmol/l H 2O 2 completely inhibited the growth of the mutant strains in afap 1 but did not affect the growth of the CA14PTs strain (non-mutant strain). In addition, the concentration of AFB 1 in the mutant strains was approximately V of that observed in the CA14PTs strain. These results suggested that Afap1 plays a key role in the regulation of oxidative stress and aflatoxin production in A. flavus. ©2018 Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U. on behalf of Asociación Argentina de Microbiología. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (https://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

KEYWORDS Aflatoxin; Oxidative stress; Afap1; Aspergillus flavus

Resumen

La aflatoxina es un metabolito secundario cancerígeno producido principalmente por Aspergillus flavus y Aspergillus parasiticus, que pone en riesgo grave a la salud de los humanos y los animales. El estrés oxidativo es una respuesta de defensa común, y es sabido que las especies reactivas de oxígeno (ROS) pueden inducir la síntesis de una serie de metabolitos secundarios, incluida la aflatoxina. Empleando mutantes carentes del gen afap1 se evaluó el papel de Afap1 en el estrés oxidativo y la síntesis de aflatoxinas. El crecimiento de las cepas mutadas se vio significativamente inhibido con el aumento de la concentración de H 2O 2, la inhibición fue completa a 40mmol/l. Sin embargo, en el análisis cuantitativo por HPLC, la concentración de la aflatoxina AFBi aumentó con el aumento de la concentración de H 2O 2 hasta 10mmol/l. Tras un análisis apoyado en la información provista por la herramienta NCBI BLAST, se supuso que Afap1, un factor de transcripción de la cremallera de leucina básica (bZIP), estaba asociado con el estrés oxidativo en este hongo. El tratamiento con 5mmol/l de H 2O 2 inhibió completamente el crecimiento de las cepas mutantes en afap1, pero no afectó el crecimiento de la cepa CA14PTs (cepa no mutada). Además, la concentración de AFB 1 en las cepas mutadas fue de aproximadamente 1/4 de la observada en CA14PTs. Estos resultados sugieren que Afap1 juega un papel clave en la regulación del estrés oxidativo y la producción de aflatoxinas en A. flavus.

PALABRAS CLAVE Aflatoxina; Estrés oxidativo; Afap1; Aspergillus flavus

Introduction

Aflatoxin is a secondary metabolite produced mainly by Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus. As the most potent naturally-occurring toxic and carcinogenic substance, aflatoxin causes an estimated 28% of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), while HCC is the most common form of liver cancer in the world 39 and the case rate is very high in sub-Saharan Africa, the Western Pacific region and Southeast Asia, as well as in Central America. Individuals with liver damage due to hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection are particularly vulnerable to aflatoxin invasion 14. In addition, aflatoxin can lead to dysfunction of the immune system, dysplasia in children, and even death due to acute poisoning 10 18. Aflatoxin contamination occurs in a wide range of food and feed commodities, including wheat, maize, peanuts, rice, peanut oil, cotton seed, milk, nuts and dairy products 2. Therefore, aflatoxin not only poses a serious threat to human and animal health, but also causes huge economic losses.

The gene cluster involved in aflatoxin biosynthesis has been identified 3 5 9 13 2 41 44. Most gene functions have been clarified 1 9. AflR and AflS are two key transcription factors. The aflatoxin regulatory gene aflR activates the transcription of other structural genes in the aflatoxin biosynthesis pathway by encoding a positive regulatory factor 6. AflS is adjacent to AflR and participates in the regulation of aflatoxin biosynthesis together with AflR. The combination of AflS and AflR forms a complex, which is then bound together in the promoter region of each structural gene in the cluster 7. In addition to aflR and aflS, there are many regulatory genes involved in aflatoxin biosynthesis regulation outside the aflatoxin gene cluster. laeA and veA encode global transcription factors that regulate the biosynthesis of many secondary metabolites, such as aflatoxin, sterigma-tocystin, and penicillin 4 11 12 19.

There is extensive evidence that secondary metabolism is associated with oxidative stress in filamentous fungi and plants 16 7 36. Based on this view, different oxidative stimuli, such as peroxides and diamide, can activate a variety of transcription factors, and many transcription factors have been proved to be involved in regulating secondary metabolism in yeast, fungi and plants. Within this network, the well-known Ap-1 transcription factor Yap-1 participated in the cellular response to oxidative stress signal in Saccharomyces cerevisiae25 33.

Like the Yap-1 roles in yeast 26, several Yap-1 homologue transcription factors have been identified in filamentous fungi, and they are usually associated with resistance to H 2O 2 or antifungals. In the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae, Moap1 mediates the oxidative stress response and is necessary for conidia formation, apical growth and pathogenicity 15. Afyap1 in Aspergillus fumigates was found to be associated with tolerance to oxidative stress 29. NapA and RsmA affect stress response, sexual development and secondary metabolism in Aspergillus nidulans42. In Aspergillus ochraceus, Aoyap1 not only participated in the oxidative stress response, but also regulated ochratoxin A biosynthesis. Similarly, to Aoyap1, ApyapA in A. parasiticus also participated in the oxidative stress response and in the modulation of aflatoxin biosynthesis 30. These findings suggested a probable similar link between the oxidative stress response and mycotoxin biosynthesis. However, under the oxidative stress condition, the mechanism of yap-1 homologue gene in the regulation of aflatoxin biosynthesis in A. flavus is not clear.

In this paper, afap1, the homologue of yap-1, was suggested to encode protein containing conserved bZIP domains based on the NCBI BLAST analysis. We engineered genetically modified strains of A. flavus lacking afap1 and showed the key role played by afap1 in response to oxidative stress and in the regulation of aflatoxin biosynthesis.

Materials and methods

Strains and growth conditions

The toxigenic A. flavus CA14PTs (Δku70, ΔniaD) and recipient (Δku70, ΔniaD, ΔpyrG) strains were obtained from Dr. Perng Kuang Chang, United States Department of Agriculture, New Orleans, USA. The strain A. nidulans WJAO1 was obtained from Prof. Shihua Wang, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou, China.

Strains were activated on potato dextrose agar (PDA) plates (20g/l dextrose, 200g/l peeled potatoes and 20 g/l agar) at 28 °C in the dark for 3 days for conidia production. Coni-dial suspensions were collected from sporulated cultures of fungi on PDA plates by surface washing with sterile deionized water containing 0.1% Tween-20. The number of conidia in the suspensions was counted using a hemocytometer and diluted to 10 6CFU/ml with 0.1% Tween-20 solution. Conidia were cultivated in 50 ml YES medium (150g/l sucrose, 20 g/l yeast extract and 1 g/l MgSO 47H 20 and solid medium supplemented with 16 g/l agar) and grown at 28 °C on a rotary incubator in the dark for AFB1 concentration detection and mycelia collection. The recipient strain was grown in broth containing yeast, glucose, trace element solution, uracil, uridine (YGTUU) (20g/l glucose, 5 g/l yeast extract, 1 ml trace element solution per liter of medium, 1 g/l uracil and 1 g/l uridine and solid medium supplemented with 15 g/l agar) at 28°C for mycelial growth and conidia production. Czapek-Dox medium (Difco) supplemented with 3% sucrose was used for mutant selection.

Hydrogen peroxide sensitivity analysis

Five microliters of conidia (10 6CFU/ml medium) from each strain were incubated in YES solid medium supplemented with different concentrations of H 20 2 (0, 5, 10, 20, and 40mmol/l) for the oxidative stress response assay. All plates were cultivated in the dark at 28 °C for 5 days, and colonies were photographed. Meanwhile, 5 ml of conidial suspension (10 6CFU/ml medium) was cultured in 50 ml YES liquid medium supplemented with the same concentrations of H 20 2 for AFBi concentration and the mycelial dry weight analysis. All experiments were performed in triplicate in three independent experiments.

AFB 1 concentration and fungi mycelial dry weight analysis

Mycelia were collected and mycelial dry weight was measured after drying in a dryer (HASUC, Inc., Shanghai, China) at 65°C for 72 h. AFB1 concentration in the culture filtrate was determined by extracting metabolites from the filtrate using methanol, followed by purification using an immunoaffinity column (Romer Labs, Inc., Tulln, Austria) according to the manufacturer's instructions. AFBi concentration was detected by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC; Agilent Series 1260; Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA). HPLC was performed on an Agilent C18 Zorbax XDB column (150 mm x 4.6 mm x5mm, Agilent Technologies), and detection was performed using a fluorescence detector (Agilent 1260; Agilent Technologies) with an excitation wavelength of 360 nm and an emission wavelength of 440 nm at 30°C. The mobile phase consisted of methanol/H 2O (7:3, v/v) injected at a flow rate of 1 ml/min.

RNA extraction and quantification of gene expression by quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR)

Total RNA was extracted from fungal mycelia collected from YES liquid medium using a RNeasy mini kit (Qiagen, Germany) according to the manufacturer's instructions. RNA samples were treated with DNA-free DNase. The purity and concentrations of RNA were determined by measuring the absorbance of samples at 260 and 280nm using spectrophotometric quantification in a Beckman DU800 spectrophotometer (Beckman, USA). qRT-PCR was carried out in triplicate in 20-μl volumes using Power SYBR green master mix (Applied Biosystems, USA) in an ABI 7500 Real-Time PCR System (Applied Biosystems, USA). The thermal-cycling program was set as follows: 95 °C for 5 min, followed by 40 cycles of 95 °C for 25 s, 55 °C to 60 °C for 25 s (optimized for each primer pair), and 72 °C for 35 s, with a melting-curve stage at 95 °C for 15 s, 60 °C for 1 min, 95 °C for 30 s, and 80 cycles of 60 °C for 15 s. Gene-specific primers were designed for each target gene using Primer 5.0 ( http://www.premierbiosoft.com/primerdesign/) ( Table 1). As an endogenous control, primers 18S-F (5-GCTCTTTTGGGTCTCGTAATTGG-3) and 18S-R (5-CGCTATTGGAGCTGGAATTACC-3) were used based on previous studies in order to cover 154 bp of the 18S RNA gene 21. Samples from each of the three biological replicates were assayed in triplicate, and data were analyzed using the ABI 7500 SDS program (Applied Biosystems, USA) by the 2-44ct method.

Table 1 Primers used in this study 

Identification of Afap1

The sequence of Afap1 and its homologues in S. cerevisiae, A. parasiticus, A. nidulans and Aspergillus fumigatus were used as input for BLAST in the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) database ( https://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi), to identify sequences with high similarities in the translated genome of A. flavus. Multiple sequence alignments were carried out using DNAssist 2.2.

Construction of the mutant strain

The deletion-mutant strain (Δafap1) was constructed as previously described 8 37. A homologous transformation system for A. flavus with the pyrG gene as selection marker was used in this study 35. The pyrG gene encodes an orotidine-5 -phosphate decarboxylase, which is a key gene in the synthesis of uracil nucleotides. The recipient strain CA14PTs ( Δku70, ΔniaD, ΔpyrG) with the pyrG deletion cannot grow on the transformant selection medium Czapek-Dox without adding uracil and uridine, while homologous transformants carrying the pyrG gene instead of afap1 could survive on the selection medium. The detailed procedure is as follows: Genomic DNA was extracted from mycelia grown for 5 days in 50 ml of YES liquid medium using benzyl chloride 38 45. For the homologous fragments, the 5' and 3' regions of afap1 (1159 and 1046 bp, respectively) were amplified with specific primer pairs Up-F/R and Down-F/R ( Table 1), which contain sequences that overlap the marker gene, and were verified by sequencing. The 1600 b p <i>pyrG gene was amplified with primer pairs pyrG-F/R from A. nidulans WJAO1 genomic DNA. The PCR-fusion product was constructed and transformed into recipient strain protoplasts using polyethylene glycol buffer (15mM KCl, 20 mM CaCl2 and 1MTris-HCl buffer, pH 7.5), and 500g/l PEG 4000. The cell suspension was plated on Czapek-Dox medium at 28 °C in the dark for 5 days. Putative mutants were confirmed by PCR using primer pairs Middle-F/R and Up-F/pyrG-R and sequencing analysis.

Southern blot

Transformants that passed the PCR pre-screening were further checked by Southern blot analysis, using the DIG system (Roche, Germany) in accordance with a previously described protocol 24. Ten μg genomic DNA was digested with Hindi!! (Takara, Japan), and then electrophoresed on a 1% agarose gel to separate by size. A sheet of nylon membranes (Hybond N+, Pharmacia, USA) was placed on top of the gel for DNA transference. The hybridization probe with DIG-labeled was synthesized with PCR DIG probe synthesis kit (Roche, Germany) by following the manufacturer's protocol. The probe matched the downstream sequence of the homology arm in the homologous recombination fragment was generated by PCR amplification using primers 5 -AACGTGGTTGTATTTGCCCC-3' and 5 -GCTCTTGGACAATGCTCTCG-3'.

Statistical analysis

Statistical analyses of the obtained data were performed using SPSS 21.0 software (IBM, Chicago, IL, USA). Differences between the means were evaluated by a one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), and in all cases, statistical significance was established at p < 0.05.

Results

Effect of different oxidative stress on A. flavusgrowth and AFB 1 production

Oxidative stress is a very important environmental stimulus for fungi. To evaluate the effect of oxidative stress on the growth and AFB 1 production of A. flavus, H 2O 2 solutions at different concentrations (0, 5, 10, 20, and 40mmol/l) were added to YES plates and liquid culture medium, respectively. The growth of A. flavus CA14PTs was significantly inhibited by the increased H 2O 2 and were completely inhibited at 40mmol/l ( Fig. 1A). TheAFB 1 concentration in YES broth was increased after the treatment of H 2O 2 at the concentration of 5, 10 and 20mmol/l, respectively ( Fig. 1B). There is no obvious increase for AFBi concentration at 20mmol/l H 2O 2 compared with 10mmol/l. In addition, the expression levels of key aflatoxin biosynthetic structural genes (aflJ, aflM, aflO, aflP and aflX) were up-regulated by the treatment of 10mmol/l H 2O 2 according to qRT-PCR ( Fig. 1C). The data based on the results indicated that oxidative stress could affect strain growth and stimulate aflatoxin biosynthesis.

Figure 1 Colony growth and aflatoxin production after 0, 5, 10, 20 and 40 mmol/l H 2O 2 treatment. The A. flavus toxigenic strain CA14PTs was grown for 5 d at 28 °C in darkness. (A) View from top of colony. (B) Determination of AFB 1 concentration per unit of mycelial weight by HPLC in response to H 2O 2. Different letters indicate that there were statistically significant differences ( p <0.05). (C) Relative expressions of aflatoxin synthesis genes. Samples were harvested after H 2O 2 treatment (10 mmol/l), and gene expression was measured by quantitative real-time PCR. Standard errors of the mean are shown (n = 3). Different letters indicate that there were statistically significant differences ( p = 0.05). 

Identification of Afap1, a Yap-1 homologue in A. flavus

By the NCBI BLAST analysis, Afap1 was identified as a putative bZIP transcription factor. Alignment of the Afap1 protein sequence to those of Yap-1 ( S. cerevisiae S288c), ApyapA (A. parasiticus SU-1), NapA (A. nidulans FGSC A4) and Afyap1 (A. fumigatus Af293) ( Fig. 2) showed two conserved domains: A C-terminal nuclear export signal (NES) embedded in a characteristic cysteine-rich domain (c-CRD) and a N-terminal basic leucine zipper domain (bZIP domain). Afap1 has lower homology (16.22% similarity) with its yeast orthologues, but it has higher homology with other filamentous ascomycetes. The conserved bZIP domain and cystein-rich domain (CRD) suggested that Afap1 has a similar role in response to oxidative stress and toxin biosynthesis in A. flavus as other homologue proteins.

Figure 2 Amino acid sequence alignment of the characteristic domain. Yap-1 is from S. cerevisiae S288c, ApyapA is from A. parasiticus SU-1, NapA is from A. nidulans FGSC A4, Afyap1 is from A. fumigatus Af293, Afap1 is from A. flavus. The bZIP domain is shown as a vertical line box, and the cysteine-rich domain (CRD) as a horizontal line box. The amino acid sequence of these domains of Afap1 is aligned with those of Yap-1, ApyapA, NapA, and Afyap1. Boxes indicate conserved regions of different functional domains. 

Confirmation of Aafap1 deletion mutants

To analyze the role of afap1 in oxidative-stress response and aflatoxin biosynthesis, Aafap1 mutants were generated using homologous recombination ( Fig. 3A). Two transformants (i.e., Aafap1-1 and Aafap1-2) were selected for further PCR verification. A 700bp fragment, encoding for partial ORF of afap1, could be amplified with primers Middle-F/R in CA14PTs but not in the positive transformants. A 2800 bp fragment, encoding for pyrG and upstream of afap1, could only be amplified with primers Up-F/pyrG-R in positive transformants. As shown in Figure 3B, only the 2800 bp fragment was observed in Aafap1-1 and Aafap1-2. Further sequencing analysis showed that the gene afap1 was exactly replaced by pyrG in these two mutants. Additionally, southern blot hybridization revealed a 3.4kb fragment and a 2.2 kb fragment in CA14PTs and the afap1 mutants when digested with HindIII, respectively ( Fig. 3C). It is confirmed that there are sequence differences between the afap1 mutants and CA14PTs as expected. Combined with the above homologous recombination strategy and PCR analysis, it was shown that afap1 was properly deleted and mono-copy.

Figure 3 Construction and verification of the afap1-deletion mutants. (A) Afap1 gene-replacement strategy. Primers are shown in Table 1. (B) PCR confirmation of the A afap1 mutants. Lanes 1, 3 and 5 results are from the use of the Middle-F and Middle-R primers, and lanes 2, 4 and 6 results are from the use of the Up-F and pyrG-R primers. M, DNA marker; lanes 1 and 2, CA14PTs; lanes 3 and 4, A afap1-1; lanes 5 and 6, A afap1-2. (C) Southern blot hybridization. Lanes 1, CA14PTs; lanes 2, A afap1-1; lanes 3, A afap1-2. In CA14PTs, probe reveals a fragment of 3.4 kb when digested with Hind\\\. In the mutant strains A afap1, probe reveals a fragment of 2.2 kb when digested with Hindlll. 

Effects of afap1 deletion on sensitivity to oxidative stress

CA14PTs and the Aafap1 mutants were incubated in YES plates supplemented with different concentration of H2O2 ( Fig. 4A). The growth rates of the CA14PTs and Aafap1 mutants were similar on YES plates without H 2O 2. However, the growth of Aafap1 mutants was completely inhibited by 5mmol/l H 2O 2. In contrast, the growth of CA14PTs was not inhibited even at 10mmol/l H 2O 2. Meanwhile, AFBi concentration of the Aafap1 mutants was significantly decreased by around 75%, which compared to CA14PTs ( p < 0.01) ( Fig. 4B). In addition, the expression levels of the key transcription factors genes (tcsA, bos1, atfB and srrA) related to the oxidative-stress response and aflatoxin biosynthetic genes (aflD, aflB, aflR, aflS, aflM and aflP) in YES liquid medium were detected using qRT-PCR. The expression of tcsA, bos1, srrA, aflB and aflR was significantly up-regulated in the Aafap1 mutants compared to CA14PTs, and the expression of aflM and aflP were significantly down-regulated. The expression of atfB was up-regulated in the Aafap1 mutants, although the difference was not significant ( Fig. 5).

Figure 4 Defects of CA14PTs and Aafap1 mutants in response to different oxidative stress. (A) CA14PTs and Aafap1 mutants were separately incubated in YES medium under different oxidative-stress conditions for 5 days. (B) HPLC analyses of AFB 1 concentration per unit of mycelial weight. Different letters indicate that there were statistically significant differences ( p = 0.05). 

Figure 5 Quantitative real-time PCR analyses of genes related to oxidative stress and aflatoxin biosynthesis in the Aafap1 mutants as compared with those in CA14PTs. All data represent the means of three independent samples, and standard errors of the means are shown (n = 3). Different letters indicate that there were statistically significant differences ( p = 0.05). 

Discussion

Oxidative stress is one of the earliest responses and a common cell defense mechanism in living things. Cellular response to oxidative stress plays a crucial role in plants, vertebrates and fungi; it enables the cell to survive a variety of extra- and intracellular oxidative stressors. The classical review of the oxidative stress response in fungi was developed based on research in yeast which showed that regulation of defense-related antioxidant genes contributed to the survival of the organism. The regulation of secondary metabolism is closely linked to the cellular response to oxidative stress in filamentous fungi and contributes to the complexity of the response 16. However, this response is most complicated and robust than that of yeast in response to various environmental conditions.

Previous reports strongly suggested that several transcription factors associated with the Stress Activated Protein Kinase/Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase (SAPK/MAPK) pathway coordinate the transcriptional level of secondary metabolism genes and antioxidant enzymes, thereby controlling the metabolic processes in cellular stress response. Ap-1 family is one of the most important transcription factors. Ap-1 family have many homologous proteins in S. cerevisiae33 and Aspergillus spp. 30 31; however, its role in toxin biosynthesis and virulence is divergent 28. In A. parasiticus and A. ochraceus, deletion of apyapA and aoyap1 resulted in increases of aflatoxin and ochratoxin, respectively 30 32. In Fusarium graminearum, the Afgap1 mutant showed higher sensitivity to oxidative stress (H2O2) and higher level of trichothecene concentration associated with overexpression of TRI genes. However, the activation mechanism of toxin accumulation in response to oxidative stress was not observed 25. In contrast, in A. nidulans, deletion or overexpression of napA led to a decreased tolerance to oxidative stress and sterigmatocystin synthesis 42. In this study, the growth of CA14PTs was significantly inhibited following treatment with 20mmol/l H 2O 2, whereas growth of the knockout mutants was completely inhibited following treatment with only 5 mmol/l H 2O 2 due to the lack of a key transcription factor Afap1 related to the oxidative-stress response. The effect of deletion of afap1 is similar with napA and is contrary to aoyap1, apyapA and fgap1.

Hong et al. (2013) proposed that SrrA (SrrA recruits AP-1) and AtfB combined with the promoter regions of aflatoxin biosynthetic genes to help their induction by transcription factor AflR 17. Moreover, AtfB has been proved to combine with the promoter regions of aflatoxin biosynthetic genes including aflB (fas-1), aflD (nor-1), aflM (ver-1) and aflP (omtA), which carry CRE sites 17 34. In addition, the sensor kinases TcsA transmit oxidative stress signals through SrrA and/or SskA response regulators 23, and then cooperate with Ap-1 against oxidative stress in other Aspergillus spp. 16. Therefore, a similar pathway may have A. flavus since oxidative stress signals were transmitted through sensor kinases (ortholog of TcsA or Bos1 in yeast) to AtfB-SrrA-Afap1 homologous complex, and then induced aflatoxin biosynthesis ( Fig. 6). In this study, the expression of tcsA, bos1, srrA and aflR was up-regulated in the Aafap1 mutants compared to CA14PTs. aflB, encoding fatty acid synthase and being close to aflR in the aflatoxin gene cluster, was also up-regulated in the Aafap1 mutants. However, the expression of aflM and aflP, two downstream structural genes, were significantly down-regulated in the Aafap1 mutants, which resulted in a down-regulation of aflatoxin production. On the other hand, interestingly, the gene expression of aflS was down-regulated in the knockout mutants. Down-regulation of aflS led to the decreased production of AflS protein, which is beneficial for some potential suppressors to bind to AflR in place of AflS. Consequently, the transcription of the aflatoxin biosynthesis gene, which relies on AflS-AflR, would be reduced and aflatoxin biosynthesis would decrease. There were similar findings in some previous studies 20 40 43.

Figure 6 Hypothetical oxidative stress-activated signaling pathway in A. flavus. Based on available experimental evidence, we speculate that exposure of the fungal cell to intra- or extracellular ROS activates signaling cascade. 

The present study revealed that oxidative stress inhibited the growth of toxigenic strains and was completely inhibited at 40mmol/l H 2O 2. However, the AFB 1 concentration was increased until 10mmol/l. According to the NCBI BLAST analysis, transcription factor Afap1 has the conserved protein domains of other AP-1 homologue proteins. Deletion of afap1 resulted in an increase in sensitivity to oxidative stress and a decrease in aflatoxin production in A. flavus. These results suggested that afap1 plays a key role in tolerance to oxidative stress and promoted aflatoxin production in A. flavus.

Acknowledgments

We gratefully acknowledge the financial support of National Key R&D Program of China (2017YFC1600903), National Program of China Basic Science and Technology Research (2013FY113400).

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Received: March 16, 2018; Accepted: July 15, 2018; pub: March 22, 2019

*Corresponding authors. E-mail addresses:deepak.bhatnagar@ars.usda.gov (D. Bhatnagar), liuyang01@caas.cn (Y. Liu).

These authors contributed equally to this work.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Creative Commons License 0325-7541/© 2018 Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U. on behalf of Asociación Argentina de Microbiología. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).