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Transposition of the Autonomous Fot1 Element in the Filamentous Fungus Fusarium oxysporum
Quirico Migheli1,a, Richard Laugéa, Jean-Michel Davièrea, Catherine Gerlingera, Fiona Kapera, Thierry Langina, and Marie-Josée Daboussiaa Institut de Génétique et Microbiologie, Université Paris-sud, Bâtiment 400, F-91405, France
Corresponding author: Marie-Josée Daboussi, Institut de Génétique et Microbiologie, Université Paris-sud, Bâtiment 400, 91405 Orsay Cedex, France., daboussi{at}igmors.u-psud.fr (E-mail)
Communicating editor: M. J. SIMMONS
| ABSTRACT |
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Autonomous mobility of different copies of the Fot1 element was determined for several strains of the fungal plant pathogen Fusarium oxysporum to develop a transposon tagging system. Two Fot1 copies inserted into the third intron of the nitrate reductase structural gene (niaD) were separately introduced into two genetic backgrounds devoid of endogenous Fot1 elements. Mobility of these copies was observed through a phenotypic assay for excision based on the restoration of nitrate reductase activity. Inactivation of the Fot1 transposase open reading frame (frameshift, deletion, or disruption) prevented excision in strains free of Fot1 elements. Molecular analysis of the Nia+ revertant strains showed that the Fot1 element reintegrated frequently into new genomic sites after excision and that it can transpose from the introduced niaD gene into a different chromosome. Sequence analysis of several Fot1 excision sites revealed the so-called footprint left by this transposable element. Three reinserted Fot1 elements were cloned and the DNA sequences flanking the transposon were determined using inverse polymerase chain reaction. In all cases, the transposon was inserted into a TA dinucleotide and created the characteristic TA target site duplication. The availability of autonomous Fot1 copies will now permit the development of an efficient two-component transposon tagging system comprising a trans-activator element supplying transposase and a cis-responsive marked element.
BY their ability to move from one location in the genome to another, transposable elements act as insertional mutagens. The resulting mutated gene can then be isolated by using the inserted transposon as a tag. Transposons have been used successfully to clone genes from many organisms (for review see ![]()
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Despite the great importance of filamentous fungi in ecology, animal and plant pathology, or in metabolic production, no transposon-based gene tagging system has so far been developed for these microorganisms. This is probably because laboratory strains of the two best-studied ascomycetes, Neurospora crassa and Aspergillus nidulans, appear to be devoid of active transposons (![]()
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Fot1 was discovered as an insertion within the nitrate reductase (nia) gene. It is 1928 bp long and has short (44 bp) inverted terminal repeats. Fot1 expresses one mRNA of 1.7 kb, which extends over most of the element and encodes a putative transposase of 542 amino acids (![]()
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The Fot1 element is widely distributed in the F. oxysporum species with a variable copy number, ranging from 0 to >100 (![]()
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Fungal strains and media:
The following wild-type strains of F. oxysporum (all obtained from C. Alabouvette, INRA, Dijon, France) were used: FOM24, pathogenic on melon, whose genome contains >100 copies of the Fot1 element; two nonpathogenic strains, FO5 with one Fot1 copy and FO47 that is free of Fot1. From these strains, nitrate reductase-deficient mutants were selected on the basis of resistance to chlorate as described in ![]()
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Vector constructions:
Plasmid p11
NdeI was first generated from plasmid pMJT2 (![]()
NdeI by the addition of a 5.0-kb NdeI fragment chosen at random from F. oxysporum strain FOM24 to increase the frequency of single site integration events while keeping the niaD sequence intact. The 2.7-kb EcoRI fragment of pFox15 was then replaced by either the 4.6-kb EcoRI fragment present in pIN62 or pIN136, constructed using the strategy previously described for pIN37 in ![]()
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Plasmid pEC62
BamHI was constructed by deleting the internal 0.9-kb BamHI fragment of Fot1. Plasmid pEC62-hph C contains the 1.4-kb HpaI fragment from pCB1003 (![]()
BamHI, 6.0 kb in pEC62-hph C, and 4.6 kb in pEC62-fr.
Transformation experiments:
Protoplast preparation and polyethylene glycol-mediated transformation of the nitrate reductase-deficient mutants were conducted according to ![]()
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DNA preparation and Southern blot analysis:
DNA for Southern blot analysis and for inverse polymerase chain reaction (IPCR) was obtained by a miniprep extraction method (![]()
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Phenotypic selection assay:
Single spore isolates from independent cotransformants characterized by integration of the intact 4.6-kb EcoRI fragment of constructs pEC136 or pEC62 were grown for 48 hr in liquid complete medium at 26° on a rotary shaker (150 rpm). Conidial suspensions were obtained by filtering through a 100-mm nylon filter washed twice with sterile distilled water. Two protocols were used: (i) the conidia were plated (102103 spores per milliliter) onto solid minimal medium (MM) containing nitrate as the sole nitrogen source (MM-nitrate) or (ii) the conidia were inoculated (106107 spores per milliliter) in liquid MM-nitrate. Excision events were identified after 1421 days of incubation at 26° by the appearance of the wild-type phenotype. Each patch of aerial mycelium developed on solid MM-nitrate was considered to be an independent reversion event. Usually, 110 reversion events per plate were observed, yielding a reversion frequency with respect to the number of spores plated of ~10-2 to 10-3. In liquid medium selection, only one revertant was isolated from each MM-nitrate-containing tube. Then, single spore colonies from revertants were purified on MM-nitrate and further analyzed by Southern analysis.
DNA sequencing:
The Fot1-62 copy was sequenced by the dideoxy chain termination method (![]()
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Sequencing of the DNA regions flanking reinsertion sites of transposed Fot1 copies was performed using the T7 Sequencing Kit (Pharmacia) and the oligonucleotide pairs Ft2 (5'-CCTTCCTAATGGCGCGTGATCCCCG-3') + Ft3 (5'-GGCGATCTTGATTGTATTGTGGTG-3') and Ft4 (5'-CTCTGCATTTTTAGCTATTTATTTGAC-3') + Ft5 (5'-CGTCCGCAGAGTATTACCGGCATTGTAG-3') as primers.
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR):
Putative Fot1 sequences in the FO5 and FO47 strains were sought using the unique Ft1 primer or the combination of the Ft2/Ft3 internal primers, and the nia gene was used as a positive control. To analyze the footprints left by excision of Fot1 copies in independent revertants, the 2.7-kb EcoRI fragment of the niaD gene was first amplified by primers niaD-144 and niaD-145. PCR was performed according to ![]()
IPCR analysis:
To isolate the regions that flank the reinsertion sites of the transposed Fot1 copies, 2 µg of DNA from independent revertants was digested with either one of the following enzymes, EcoRI, XhoI, BglI, or SacII (Boehringer), which do not have restriction sites within the Fot1 element. The digested DNA was separated by agarose gel electrophoresis and a gel slice containing the reinserted Fot1 copy was obtained. DNA (~100 ng) was eluted by the Jetsorb kit (Bioprobe, Montreuil, France) and directly self-circularized overnight in a total volume of 100 µl either at 16° using a ligation kit (Amersham) or at 9° by incubating with 1 unit of T4 ligase (Boehringer). After self-ligation, DNA was ethanol precipitated, resuspended in 20 µl of H2O, and ~50 ng was used as template in IPCR by using the expand long template PCR system (Boehringer) and the oligonucleotides Ft2 and Ft3 as inverse primers. PCR conditions were 2 min at 94° followed by 10 cycles at 94° for 10 sec, 65° for 30 sec, 68° for 6 min, 20 cycles at 94° for 10 sec, 65° for 30 sec, and 68° for 10 min and a final elongation step at 68° for 17 min. A second cycle of nested IPCR was generally performed by using the oligonucleotides Ft4 and Ft5 as primers. IPCR products were purified by the Jetsorb kit (Bioprobe), and cloned with the pGEM-T vector system (Promega, Madison, WI).
Chromosomal assignment of transposed Fot1 copies:
To determine the transposition pattern of Fot1 copies introduced into F. oxysporum, analysis of the electrophoretic karyotypes of transformant T272 from FO47 and of four derived revertants was performed. Intact chromosomal DNAs of F. oxysporum strains were obtained from protoplasts prepared by growing and digesting mycelia as described by ![]()
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| RESULTS |
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Screening for Fot1-free strains:
Because resident genomic Fot1 elements could support the excision of transformed Fot1 copies inserted into the niaD gene by supplying transposase in trans, a genetic context free of active Fot1 was required to test the ability of the transformed elements to transpose autonomously. A collection of 50 pathogenic and nonpathogenic isolates of F. oxysporum was examined by Southern blot analysis using Fot1 as a probe (![]()
Experimental design:
Figure 1 summarizes the strategy adopted in our experimental design. We have constructed (see MATERIALS AND METHODS) two plasmids, pEC136 and pEC62, which contain the A. nidulans niaD gene inactivated by the insertion of a Fot1 element. These elements (Fot1-136 and Fot1-62) are inserted into the third intron of the niaD gene, at different nucleotide positions and in opposite orientations (see Figure 5). The two plasmids were introduced by cotransformation with the pAN7-1 plasmid into different nia- recipient strains. Hygromycin-B-resistant transformants (520 transformants/microgram of pAN7-1) were screened for the presence of niaD sequences on colony blots with the niaD probe. Cotransformants were detected with a frequency of 5090% in the different experiments. Southern hybridization analysis revealed that most cotransformants had the 4.6-kb EcoRI fragment from plasmid pEC136 or pEC62, which hybridizes to both 32P-labeled niaD and Fot1 probes (Figure 2), indicating that intact niaD::Fot1 constructs have been integrated. Some of these cotransformants contain only one copy of the construct as exemplified by T272, T280, and T281 in Figure 3, while cotransformants T183 and T229 contain at least two copies.
Selection of excision events:
The ability of the plasmid-borne Fot1 to excise was first tested in the FOM24 strain, which contains active Fot1 elements. After 714 days of growth at 26° on solid MM-nitrate, FOM24-derived cotransformants with a sparse growth typical of niaD inactivation gave rise to patches of aerial mycelium indicating restoration of the wild-type phenotype at a relatively high frequency, usually in the range of 10-2 to 10-3 (see MATERIALS AND METHODS).
In contrast, in FO5- and FO47-derived cotransformants free of endogenous transposons, reversion events could be detected only when spores were inoculated at the highest concentration (106107/ml) into liquid MM-nitrate. To exclude the possibility that excision was promoted by an endogenous source of transposase supplied by other transposable elements present in the genome, as observed for Drosophila hobo elements introduced in Musca domestica (![]()
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Fot1 reintegrates frequently after excision:
EcoRI-digested DNA from independent revertants consistently showed a wild-type fragment of 2.7 kb hybridizing to the niaD probe (Figure 3, top), which confirmed the excision of at least one Fot1 copy from the niaD gene. In 22 independent FO47-deriving revertants that contain a single copy of the transgene (see Table 1), excision of Fot1-136 or Fot1-62 copies led to the disappearance of the 4.6-kb signal (examples shown in Figure 3, left). In contrast, for the 2 FO47- and the 17 FO5-derived independent revertants that contain two copies of the transgene (see Table 1), either (1) one of the two Fot1 copies integrated into the genome excised from the niaD gene, giving rise to the 2.7-kb band hybridizing to the niaD probe, while the other did not excise (e.g., Rt183, Ra,b,d 229, in Figure 3, right), or (2) both copies excised (e.g., Rb,c,u 183 and Rg229, in Figure 3, right).
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The strains bearing somatic excisions were analyzed using a Fot1 probe to check for possible Fot reintegration (Figure 3, bottom). The results presented in Table 1 show that in the two genetic backgrounds, the excised Fot1 element reinserted in 7075% of the revertants analyzed. Our data thus suggest that transposition of Fot1 likely occurs by a "cut-and-paste" mechanism, which includes excision of an element from its original site and reinsertion of the same element at another site.
Chromosomal assignment of transposed copies:
The locations of the transposed copies of Fot1 in some revertants was determined to provide insight into the process of transposition of the Fot1 element.
The single copy of the pEC62 construct in a FO47-derived transformant (strain T272) was mapped on the 3.5-Mb chromosome (Figure 4). In this strain, following excision, the Fot1 element is associated with different chromosomes in the three out of four cases that were analyzed (Figure 4C). In the fourth case, insertion occurred on the same chromosome. These data suggest that Fot1 does not transpose preferentially to proximal sites and that the high frequency of reinsertion events is likely to result from transposition into unreplicated sites.
Sequences of excision footprints and reinsertion site:
To prove that Fot1 transposes correctly into the two genetic backgrounds, we cloned and sequenced both the empty niaD sites and the flanking sequences of reinserted Fot1 elements.
DNA fragments, obtained after PCR amplification of genomic DNA of 18 independent revertants derived from FO5, FO47, and FOM24 cotransformants, were sequenced (Figure 5). As expected, the presence of a typical footprint consisting of the same three or four base pairs composed by the TA duplication site, plus one or two additional nucleotides from one or both ends of Fot1 (![]()
To determine the molecular basis of Fot1 integration events, amplification of Fot1 flanking sequences was performed by IPCR. Six Fot1 flanks were cloned and sequenced (Figure 6). The sequence in all clones contained the ends of the inverted terminal repeats of Fot1 flanked by a TA dinucleotide. After the TA, which most probably represents the duplication site, the sequences differed from each other and showed no significant similarity with any other sequence in the data bases. No strong consensus of the target sites, other than the TA dinucleotide, could be detected by comparison of the different insertion sequences. Comparison of the sequences of the integration sites obtained in our study with the consensus sequence for the flanking sequence of Tc1 integration sites (![]()
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Sequencing of the Fot1-62 copy:
The complete sequence of the autonomous Fot1-62 copy has been determined (data not shown) and compared to that of the Fot1-37 copy (![]()
| DISCUSSION |
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An autonomous Fot1 element is identified:
We have described a strategy for identifying autonomous copies of the Fot1 element from F. oxysporum, which relies on the use of a phenotypic assay based on the expression of the niaD gene that is restored upon Fot1 excision. The expression of the niaD gene is easily detected by dense growth on medium with nitrate as the sole nitrogen source. Using this assay, we showed that Fot1 excision can occur in two F. oxysporum strains free of endogenous Fot1 elements. Moreover, the use of defective Fot1 elements unable to excise in these backgrounds demonstrates that excision of Fot1 from the niaD gene is not due to a cross-mobilizing system but is promoted by the transposase encoded by the cloned Fot1 copies. These two Fot1 copies (Fot1-62 and Fot1-136) represent the first autonomous DNA transposable element ever described in filamentous fungi.
Fot1 may transpose by a cut-and-paste mechanism:
This study has permitted a detailed analysis of Fot1 integration at both the molecular and chromosomal level. The data presented here suggest that transposition of Fot1 appears to occur via a cut-and-paste mechanism in which the Fot1 element excises from the donor site and reinserts in a new location with a high frequency (~75%).
The chromosomal locations of four transposed Fot1 demonstrate that Fot1 is able to jump from one chromosome to another, indicating that there seems to be no preference to transpose near the donor site. This pattern of distribution is quite different from that observed in the FOM24 strain, in which the numerous copies of Fot1 are concentrated on some chromosomes, suggesting a preference for transposition to genetically linked sites (J. M. DAVIERE, unpublished results). This difference suggests that patterns of transposition of Fot1 can vary with the host. This has been reported for transposed Ac/Ds elements that transpose preferentially to linked sites (6070%) in maize (![]()
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The origin of Fot1 footprints:
Fot1, like many other transposons in animals and plants (![]()
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From our data on somatic excision and integration events, we believe that the double-stranded gap repair mechanism may also be applicable to Fot1. Indeed, the structural similarities between Fot1 and Tc1, i.e., short size, TA site duplication, and conservation of the DD35E motif (![]()
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Development of a transposon-based gene tagging system:
Identification of autonomous Fot1 copies offers the opportunity to develop a gene tagging system based on the use of a transposable element, a strategy not yet available in filamentous fungi. Although the present work was carried out with nonpathogenic strains of F. oxysporum, this approach is likely to be of great value in the molecular dissection of pathogenicity in phytopathogenic isolates of the fungus. The ability of Fot1 to excise and reinsert frequently at many sites distributed throughout the genome should be exploited to mutagenize the whole genome to generate mutants affected in pathogenesis. Mutants impaired in their pathogenic potential can be selected among Fot1-transposed strains, and genes mutated in this way can be isolated by using the transposon as a tag; the mutated allele, in turn, can be used as a probe to clone the wild-type gene. This strategy will clearly be advantageous over other strategies, given the ability of the introduced transposon to keep moving to new sites in the genome, generating many new mutations. However, to use the Fot1 element as a gene tag efficiently, one should be able to select as many independent somatic transposition events as possible in each transformant. Although somatic excision can be monitored easily through the nia excision marker and reinsertion was shown to occur at a frequency of 70%, the level of activity of the introduced Fot1 element may be insufficient in other strains for use directly in transposon tagging experiments. More active autonomous elements are being constructed by linking the open reading frame of Fot1-62 to strong promoters from A. nidulans genes, both constitutive (gpdA) or inducible (alcA, ![]()
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Can Fot1 elements be used in other species?
The extraordinary utility of transposons as tools for genome manipulation in plants, Drosophila, and nematodes leads one to imagine what might be achieved in filamentous fungi in similar ways. The phenotypic excision assay developed to monitor transposition excision in F. oxysporum, which consists of an autonomous Fot1 element inserted into an intron of the niaD gene, rendering it inactive until the element is excised, can be directly applied to different fungal species in which nia- mutants are available. The fact that these nia- mutants can easily be recovered through their resistance to chlorate (![]()
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Finally, the fact that Fot1-like elements have recently been discovered in different species of Ascomycetes, such as Magnaporthe grisea (![]()
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Present address: DI.VA.PRA., University of Torino, via Leonardo da Vinci, I-10095 Grugliasco (To), Italy. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Steven Langrell for constructing some plasmids and Dr. Masayuki Nozue for participating in the IPCR experiments. We also thank Charles White and Philippe Silar for helpful comments on the manuscript. Part of this research was supported by funds from the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (URA 2225). Q.M. and F.K. acknowledge the receipt of a fellowship under Human Capital and Mobility Project ERBCHRXCT930244.
Manuscript received July 10, 1998; Accepted for publication November 20, 1998.
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