Expression of microRNA-like RNA-2 (Fgmil-2) and bioH1 from a single transcript in Fusarium graminearum are inversely correlated to regulate biotin synthesis during vegetative growth and host infection

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Abstract

MicroRNA-like RNAs (milRNAs) post-transcriptionally down-regulate target genes. We investigated Fusarium graminearum (Fg) milRNA expression during fungal vegetative growth and infection of wheat. Small RNA sequencing identified 36 milRNAs from Fg, one of which, Fgmil-2, had >100 transcripts per million in conidia, mycelia and infected wheat, with the highest expression in conidia and the lowest expression in colonized wheat tissue. Fgmil-2 displays perfect homology to the 3ʹ-untranslated region (3ʹ-UTR) of an FgbioH1 messenger RNA that is involved in biotin biosynthesis. Poly(A) polymerase-mediated rapid amplification of cDNA ends combined with sequencing analysis demonstrated that cleavage at a specific site by FgDicer2 in the 3ʹ-UTR of FgbioH1 transcripts generated the Fgmil-2 precursor with a typical hairpin structure. Deletion of FgbioH1 or FgDicer2 genes abolished Fgmil-2 biogenesis. FgbioH1 had an inversely correlated pattern of expression to that of Fgmil-2 and FgDicer2. Deletion of FgbioH1 also showed that it is required for mycelial growth, virulence, mycotoxin biosynthesis and expression of biotin-dependent carboxylase genes. This study reveals in Fg a novel mode of inversely correlated post-transcriptional regulation in which Fgmil-2 originates from its own target transcript, FgbioH, to govern biotin biosynthesis.

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Guo, M. W., Yang, P., Zhang, J. B., Liu, G., Yuan, Q. S., He, W. J., … Liao, Y. C. (2019). Expression of microRNA-like RNA-2 (Fgmil-2) and bioH1 from a single transcript in Fusarium graminearum are inversely correlated to regulate biotin synthesis during vegetative growth and host infection. Molecular Plant Pathology, 20(11), 1574–1581. https://doi.org/10.1111/mpp.12859

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