4.6 Article

Oxalate Efflux Transporter from the Brown Rot Fungus Fomitopsis palustris

期刊

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
卷 76, 期 23, 页码 7683-7690

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AEM.00829-10

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资金

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [19580172]
  2. Hokuto Foundation for Bio-science
  3. Development and Assessment of Sustainable Humanosphere (DASH)/Forest Biomass Analytical System (FBAS) [20DF19-21DF19]
  4. Kyoto University
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19580172] Funding Source: KAKEN

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An oxalate-fermenting brown rot fungus, Fomitopsis palustris, secretes large amounts of oxalic acid during wood decay. Secretion of oxalic acid is indispensable for the degradation of wood cell walls, but almost nothing is known about the transport mechanism by which oxalic acid is secreted from F. palustris hyphal cells. We characterized the mechanism for oxalate transport using membrane vesicles of F. palustris. Oxalate transport in F. palustris was ATP dependent and was strongly inhibited by several inhibitors, such as valinomycin and NH4+, suggesting the presence of a secondary oxalate transporter in this fungus. We then isolated a cDNA, FpOAR (Fomitopsis palustris oxalic acid resistance), from F. palustris by functional screening of yeast transformants with cDNAs grown on oxalic acid-containing plates. FpOAR is predicted to be a membrane protein that possesses six transmembrane domains but shows no similarity with known oxalate transporters. The yeast transformant possessing FpOAR (FpOAR-transformant) acquired resistance to oxalic acid and contained less oxalate than the control transformant. Biochemical analyses using membrane vesicles of the FpOAR-transformant showed that the oxalate transport property of FpOAR was consistent with that observed in membrane vesicles of F. palustris. The quantity of FpOAR transcripts was correlated with increasing oxalic acid accumulation in the culture medium and was induced when exogenous oxalate was added to the medium. These results strongly suggest that FpOAR plays an important role in wood decay by acting as a secondary transporter responsible for secretion of oxalate by F. palustris.

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