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Dive into the research topics where Beverly G. Montalbano is active.

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Featured researches published by Beverly G. Montalbano.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2003

Sequence comparison of aflR from different Aspergillus species provides evidence for variability in regulation of aflatoxin production

Kenneth C. Ehrlich; Beverly G. Montalbano; Peter J. Cotty

Aflatoxin contamination of foods and feeds is a world-wide agricultural problem. Aflatoxin production requires expression of the biosynthetic pathway regulatory gene, aflR, which encodes a Cys6Zn2-type DNA-binding protein. Homologs of aflR from Aspergillus nomius, bombycis, parasiticus, flavus, and pseudotamarii were compared to investigate the molecular basis for variation among aflatoxin-producing taxa in the regulation of aflatoxin production. Variability was found in putative promoter consensus elements and coding region motifs, including motifs involved in developmental regulation (AbaA, BrlA), regulation of nitrogen source utilization (AreA), and pH regulation (PacC), and in coding region PEST domains. Some of these elements may affect expression of aflJ, a gene divergently transcribed from aflR, that also is required for aflatoxin accumulation. Comparisons of phylogenetic trees obtained with either aligned aflR intergenic region sequence or coding region sequence and the observed divergence in regulatory features among the taxa provide evidence that regulatory signals for aflatoxin production evolved to respond to a variety of environmental stimuli under differential selective pressures. Phylogenetic analyses also suggest that isolates currently assigned to the A. flavus morphotype SBG represent a distinct species and that A. nomius is a diverse paraphyletic assemblage likely to contain several species.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2011

Tight control of mycotoxin biosynthesis gene expression in Aspergillus flavus by temperature as revealed by RNA-Seq

Jiujiang Yu; Natalie D. Fedorova; Beverly G. Montalbano; Deepak Bhatnagar; Thomas E. Cleveland; Joan W. Bennett; William C. Nierman

To better understand the effect of temperature on mycotoxin biosynthesis, RNA-Seq technology was used to profile the Aspergillus flavus transcriptome under different temperature conditions. This approach allowed us to quantify transcript abundance for over 80% of fungal genes including 1153 genes that were differentially expressed at 30 and 37 °C. Eleven of the 55 secondary metabolite clusters were upregulated at the lower temperature, including aflatoxin biosynthesis genes, which were among the most highly upexpressed genes. On average, transcript abundance for the 30 aflatoxin biosynthesis genes was 3300 times greater at 30 °C as compared with 37 °C. The results are consistent with the view that high temperature negatively affects aflatoxin production by turning down transcription of the two key transcriptional regulators, aflR and aflS. Subtle changes in the expression levels of aflS to aflR appear to control transcription activation of the aflatoxin cluster.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999

Characterization of the promoter for the gene encoding the aflatoxin biosynthetic pathway regulatory protein AFLR.

Kenneth C. Ehrlich; Jeffrey W. Cary; Beverly G. Montalbano

Most genes in the aflatoxin biosynthetic pathway in Aspergillus parasiticus are regulated by the binuclear zinc cluster DNA-binding protein AFLR. The aflR promoter was analyzed in beta-glucuronidase reporter assays to elucidate some of the elements involved in the genes transcription control. Truncation at 118 bp upstream of the translational start site increased promoter activity 5-fold, while truncation at -100 reduced activity about 20-fold. These findings indicate the presence of an important positive regulatory element between -100 and -118 and a negative regulatory region further upstream. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays on nuclear extracts from A. parasiticus induced for aflatoxin expression suggest that AFLR and another, possibly more abundant, protein bind to the -100/-118 region. Another protein binds to a sequence at position -159 to -164 that matches the consensus binding site for the transcription factor involved in pH-dependent gene regulation, PACC.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

The Aflatoxin Biosynthesis Cluster Gene, aflX, Encodes an Oxidoreductase Involved in Conversion of Versicolorin A to Demethylsterigmatocystin

Jeffrey W. Cary; Kenneth C. Ehrlich; John M. Bland; Beverly G. Montalbano

ABSTRACT Biosynthesis of the toxic and carcinogenic aflatoxins by the fungus Aspergillus flavus is a complicated process involving more that 27 enzymes and regulatory factors encoded by a clustered group of genes. Previous studies found that three enzymes, encoded by verA, ver-1, and aflY, are required for conversion of versicolorin A (VA), to demethylsterigmatocystin. We now show that a fourth enzyme, encoded by the previously uncharacterized gene, aflX (ordB), is also required for this conversion. A homolog of this gene, stcQ, is present in the A. nidulans sterigmatocystin (ST) biosynthesis cluster. Disruption of aflX in Aspergillus flavus gave transformants that accumulated ∼4-fold more VA and fourfold less aflatoxin than the untransformed strain. Southern and Northern blot analyses confirmed that aflX was the only gene disrupted in these transformants. Feeding ST or O-methylsterigmatocystin, but not VA or earlier precursor metabolites, restored normal levels of AF production. The protein encoded by aflX is predicted to have domains typical of an NADH-dependent oxidoreductase. It has 27% amino acid identity to a protein encoded by the aflatoxin cluster gene, aflO (avfA). Some of domains in the protein are similar to those of epoxide hydrolases.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

Promoter elements in the aflatoxin pathway polyketide synthase gene

Kenneth C. Ehrlich; Beverly G. Montalbano; Jeffrey W. Cary; Peter J. Cotty

PksA catalyzes the formation of the polyketide backbone necessary for aflatoxin biosynthesis. Based on reporter assays and sequence comparisons of the nor1-pksA intergenic region in different aflatoxin-producing Aspergillus species, cis-acting elements for the aflatoxin pathway-specific regulatory protein, AflR, and the global-acting regulatory proteins BrlA and PacC are involved in pksA promoter activity.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2000

adhA in Aspergillus parasiticus Is Involved in Conversion of 5′-Hydroxyaverantin to Averufin

Perng-Kuang Chang; Jiujiang Yu; Kenneth C. Ehrlich; Stephen M. Boue; Beverly G. Montalbano; Deepak Bhatnagar; Thomas E. Cleveland

ABSTRACT Two routes for the conversion of 5′-hydroxyaverantin (HAVN) to averufin (AVF) in the synthesis of aflatoxin have been proposed. One involves the dehydration of HAVN to the lactone averufanin (AVNN), which is then oxidized to AVF. Another requires dehydrogenation of HAVN to 5′-ketoaverantin, the open-chain form of AVF, which then cyclizes spontaneously to AVF. We isolated a gene, adhA, from the aflatoxin gene cluster of Aspergillus parasiticus SU-1. The deduced ADHA amino acid sequence contained two conserved motifs found in short-chain alcohol dehydrogenases—a glycine-rich loop (GXXXGXG) that is necessary for interaction with NAD+-NADP+, and the motif YXXXK, which is found at the active site. A. parasiticus SU-1, which produces aflatoxins, has two copies of adhA (adhA1), whereas A. parasiticus SRRC 2043, a strain that accumulatesO-methylsterigmatocystin (OMST), has only one copy. Disruption of adhA in SRRC 2043 resulted in a strain that accumulates predominantly HAVN. This result suggests that ADHA is involved in the dehydrogenation of HAVN to AVF. Those adhAdisruptants that still made small amounts of OMST also accumulated other metabolites, including AVNN, after prolonged culture.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2008

Are the Genes nadA and norB Involved in Formation of Aflatoxin G1

Kenneth C. Ehrlich; Leslie L. Scharfenstein; Beverly G. Montalbano; Perng-Kuang Chang

Aflatoxins, the most toxic and carcinogenic family of fungal secondary metabolites, are frequent contaminants of foods intended for human consumption. Previous studies showed that formation of G-group aflatoxins (AFs) from O-methylsterigmatocystin (OMST) by certain Aspergillus species involves oxidation by the cytochrome P450 monooxygenases, OrdA (AflQ) and CypA (AflU). However, some of the steps in the conversion have not yet been fully defined. Extracts of Aspergillus parasiticus disruption mutants of the OYE-FMN binding domain reductase-encoding gene nadA (aflY) contained a 386 Da AFG1 precursor. A compound with this mass was predicted as the product of sequential OrdA and CypA oxidation of OMST. Increased amounts of a 362 Da alcohol, the presumptive product of NadA reduction, accumulate in extracts of fungi with disrupted aryl alcohol dehydrogenase-encoding gene norB. These results show that biosynthesis of AFG1 involves NadA reduction and NorB oxidation.


Mycopathologia | 2005

Divergent regulation of aflatoxin production at acidic pH by two Aspergillus strains

Kenneth C. Ehrlich; Beverly G. Montalbano; Peter J. Cotty

Production of aflatoxins (AF) by Aspergillus flavus and A. parasiticus is known to occur only at acidic pH. Although typical A. flavus isolates produced more AF as the external pH became increasingly acidic, an atypical strain from West Africa produced less. The lower AF production was not well correlated with decreases in expression of the aflatoxin pathway regulatory gene, aflR, or of two other biosynthesis genes.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1989

An ethidium bromide-agarose plate assay for the nonradioactive detection of cDNA synthesis☆

Alice A. Christen; Beverly G. Montalbano

Ethidium bromide was used to determine the success of cDNA synthesis reactions. Since ethidium bromide in agarose can be used to quantitate RNA and DNA, conditions under which the greater fluorescence of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) is utilized were devised to assay dsDNA synthesis from mRNA. Ethidium bromide at 5 micrograms/ml in agarose allowed quantitative detection of cDNA in the range of 0.03 to 0.0015 microgram. Sodium dodecyl sulfate had an adverse effect on the measurement of cDNA. Subsequent cDNA analysis by alkaline gel electrophoresis and staining in 5 micrograms/ml ethidium bromide allowed accurate and rapid sizing of cDNA and required only 0.1-0.05 microgram cDNA.


Gene | 1999

Binding of the C6-zinc cluster protein, AFLR, to the promoters of aflatoxin pathway biosynthesis genes in Aspergillus parasiticus

Kenneth C. Ehrlich; Beverly G. Montalbano; Jeffrey W. Cary

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Kenneth C. Ehrlich

United States Department of Agriculture

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Jeffrey W. Cary

United States Department of Agriculture

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Deepak Bhatnagar

Agricultural Research Service

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Thomas E. Cleveland

Agricultural Research Service

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Jiujiang Yu

United States Department of Agriculture

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Perng-Kuang Chang

United States Department of Agriculture

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John M. Dyer

Agricultural Research Service

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Alice A. Christen

United States Department of Agriculture

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