Abstract
Most models for fungal growth have proposed a directional traffic of secretory vesicles to the hyphal apex, where they temporarily aggregate at the Spitzenkörper before they fuse with the plasma membrane (PM). The PM H+-translocating ATPase (PMA-1) is delivered via the classical secretory pathway (endoplasmic reticulum [ER] to Golgi) to the cell surface, where it pumps H+ out of the cell, generating a large electrochemical gradient that supplies energy to H+-coupled nutrient uptake systems. To characterize the traffic and delivery of PMA-1 during hyphal elongation, we have analyzed by laser scanning confocal microscopy (LSCM) strains of Neurospora crassa expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged versions of the protein. In conidia, PMA-1-GFP was evenly distributed at the PM. During germination and germ tube elongation, PMA-1-GFP was found all around the conidial PM and extended to the germ tube PM, but fluorescence was less intense or almost absent at the tip. Together, the data indicate that the electrochemical gradient driving apical nutrient uptake is generated from early developmental stages. In mature hyphae, PMA-1-GFP localized at the PM at distal regions (>120m) and in completely developed septa, but not at the tip, indicative of a distinct secretory route independent of the Spitzenkörper occurring behind the apex. © 2013, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Fajardo-Somera, R. A., Bowman, B., & Riquelme, M. (2013). The plasma membrane proton pump PMA-1 is incorporated into distal parts of the hyphae independently of the spitzenkörper in Neurospora crassa. Eukaryotic Cell, 12(8), 1097–1105. https://doi.org/10.1128/EC.00328-12
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