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Dive into the research topics where Darlene M. Loprete is active.

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Featured researches published by Darlene M. Loprete.


Microbiology | 2008

Two GDP-mannose transporters contribute to hyphal form and cell wall integrity in Aspergillus nidulans

Terry W. Hill; Darlene M. Loprete; Lauren M. Fay; Barbara S. Gordon; Sonia A. Nkashama; Ravi K. Patel; Caroline V. Sartain

In order to identify novel genes affecting cell wall integrity, we have generated mutant strains of the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans that show hypersensitivity to the chitin-binding agent Calcofluor White (CFW). Affected loci are designated cal loci. The phenotype of one of these alleles, calI11, also includes shortened hyphal compartments and increased density of branching in the absence of CFW, as well as reduced staining of cell walls by the lectin FITC-Concanavalin A (ConA), which has strong binding affinity for mannosyl residues. We have identified two A. nidulans genes (AN8848.3 and AN9298.3, designated gmtA and gmtB, respectively) that complement all aspects of the phenotype. Both genes show strong sequence similarity to GDP-mannose transporters (GMTs) of Saccharomyces and other yeasts. Sequencing of gmtA from the calI11 mutant strain reveals a G to C mutation at position 943, resulting in a predicted alanine to proline substitution at amino acid position 315 within a region that is highly conserved among other fungi. No mutations were observed in the mutant strains allele of gmtB. Meiotic mapping demonstrated a recombination frequency of under 1 % between the calI locus and the phenA locus (located approximately 9.5 kb from AN8848.3), confirming that gmtA and calI are identical. A GmtA-GFP chimera exhibits a punctate distribution pattern, consistent with that shown by putative Golgi markers in A. nidulans. However, this distribution did not overlap with that of the putative Golgi equivalent marker CopA-monomeric red fluorescent protein (mRFP), which may indicate that the physically separated Golgi-equivalent organelles of A. nidulans represent physiologically distinct counterparts of the stacked cisternae of plants and animals. These findings demonstrate that gmtA and gmtB play roles in cell wall metabolism in A. nidulans similar to those previously reported for GMTs in yeasts.


Mycologia | 2002

Isolation and characterization of an endo-(1,4)-β-glucanase secreted by Achlya ambisexualis

Darlene M. Loprete; Terry W. Hill

Models of wall loosening in fungi and other walled eukaryotes require the action of proteins able to reduce the degree of linkage between components of the wall. In the oomycete Achlya ambisexualis, such a role has been proposed for a suite of endoglucanases that are secreted during branching and during the measurable wall softening associated with osmotic stress. We report here the isolation and characterization of one of these isoenzymes. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 32 kDa, a pH optimum of 6.75, a pI of 4.5, and a temperature optimum of 35 C. It is partially inhibited by sulfhydryl-binding reagents and completely inhibited by the tryptophan-binding reagent NBS. The enzyme has an endohydrolytic mode of action with substrate specificity towards glucans that contain β-(1,4) linkages, either alone (carboxymethyl cellulose) or as mixed linkage (1,4–1,3)-β-glucans (e.g., Avena glucan). It does not, however, degrade amorphous insoluble (phosphoric acid swollen) cellulose. Most significantly, the enzyme can also hydrolyze linkages in an Achlya cell wall fraction previously shown to consist of a mixed-linkage (1,4–1,3)-β-glucan. This property is consistent with the long-standing hypothesis that the branching-related endoglucanases of oomycetes play a role in cell wall loosening.


Mycologia | 2010

GDP-mannose transporter paralogues play distinct roles in polarized growth of Aspergillus nidulans

Terry W. Hill; Darlene M. Loprete; Barbara S. Gordon; Chassidy J. Groover; Laura R. Johnson; Stuart A. Martin

GDP-mannose transporters (GMT) carry GDP-mannose nucleotide sugars from the cytosol across the Golgi apparatus membrane for use as substrates in protein glycosylation in plants, animals and fungi. Genomes of some fungal species, such as the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, contain only one gene encoding a GMT, while others, including Aspergillus nidulans, contain two (gmtA and gmtB). We previously showed that cell wall integrity and normal hyphal morphogenesis in A. nidulans depend upon the function of GmtA and that GmtA localizes to a Golgi-like compartment. Cells bearing the calI11 mutation in gmtA also have reduced cell surface mannosylation. Here we show that GmtB colocalizes with GmtA, suggesting that the role of GmtB is similar to that of GmtA, although the respective transcript levels differ during spore germination and early development. Transcript levels of gmtB are high in ungerminated spores and remain so throughout the first 16 h of germination. In contrast, transcript levels of gmtA are negligible in ungerminated spores but increase to levels comparable to those of gmtB during germination. These observations suggest that although GmtA and GmtB reside within the same subcellular compartments, they nevertheless perform distinct functions at different stages of development.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2014

Mutations in proteins of the Conserved Oligomeric Golgi Complex affect polarity, cell wall structure, and glycosylation in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans.

S.K. Gremillion; Steven D. Harris; Susan G. W. Kaminskyj; Darlene M. Loprete; A.C. Gauthier; S. Mercer; A.J. Ravita; Terry W. Hill

We have described two Aspergillus nidulans gene mutations, designated podB1 (polarity defective) and swoP1 (swollen cell), which cause temperature-sensitive defects during polarization. Mutant strains also displayed unevenness and abnormal thickness of cell walls. Un-polarized or poorly-polarized mutant cells were capable of establishing normal polarity after a shift to a permissive temperature, and mutant hyphae shifted from permissive to restrictive temperature show wall and polarity abnormalities in subsequent growth. The mutated genes (podB=AN8226.3; swoP=AN7462.3) were identified as homologues of COG2 and COG4, respectively, each predicted to encode a subunit of the multi-protein COG (Conserved Oligomeric Golgi) Complex involved in retrograde vesicle trafficking in the Golgi apparatus. Down-regulation of COG2 or COG4 resulted in abnormal polarization and cell wall staining. The GFP-tagged COG2 and COG4 homologues displayed punctate, Golgi-like localization. Lectin-blotting indicated that protein glycosylation was altered in the mutant strains compared to the wild type. A multicopy expression experiment showed evidence for functional interactions between the homologues COG2 and COG4 as well as between COG2 and COG3. To date, this work is the first regarding a functional role of the COG proteins in the development of a filamentous fungus.


Mycologia | 2015

Two amino acid sequences direct Aspergillus nidulans protein kinase C (PkcA) localization to hyphal apices and septation sites.

Terry W. Hill; Darlene M. Loprete; Claire E. DelBove; Justin A. Shapiro; Jordan L. Henley; Omolola O. Dawodu

The Aspergillus nidulans ortholog of protein kinase C (pkcA) is involved in the organism’s putative cell wall integrity (CWI) pathway, and PkcA also is highly localized at growing tips and forming septa. In the present work we identify the regions within PkcA that are responsible for its localization to hyphal tips and septation sites. To this end, we used serially truncated pkcA constructs and expressed them as green fluorescent protein (GFP) chimeras and identified two regions that direct PkcA localization. The first region is a 10 amino-acid sequence near the carboxyl end of the C2 domain that is required for localization to hyphal tips. Proteins containing this sequence also localize to septation sites. A second region between C2 and C1B (encompassing C1A) is sufficient for localization to septation sites but not to hyphal tips. We also report that localization to hyphal tips and septation sites alone is not sufficient for truncated constructs to complement hypersensitivity to the cell wall compromising agent calcofluor white in a strain bearing a mutation in the pkcA gene. Taken together, these results suggest that localization and stress response might be independent.


Fungal Genetics Reports | 2003

Efficient high-volume cleaning of Aspergillus nidulans cleistothecia using bare fingers.

Terry W. Hill; Darlene M. Loprete; Jared A. Castagna; Samuel O. Weems

Even seasoned workers find it tedious and sometimes frustrating to remove Hülle cells and stray conidia from Aspergillus cleistothecia by rolling them with forceps across an agar surface, particularly when large numbers must be cleaned. It can be even more challenging to teach the skill to others, especially to a whole class of easily discouraged undergraduates, who may be seeing their first high-mag image of forceps tips at the same time as their first view of a cleistothecium. Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 License. This regular paper is available in Fungal Genetics Reports: http://newprairiepress.org/fgr/vol50/iss1/2 4 Fungal Genetics Newsletter Efficient high-volume cleaning of Aspergillus nidulans cleistothecia using bare fingers. Terry W. Hill, Darlene M. Loprete, Jared A, Castagna, and Samuel O. Weems. Department of Biology and Department of Chemistry, Rhodes College, Memphis, TN 38112 USA. Even seasoned workers find it tedious and sometimes frustrating to remove Hülle cells and stray conidia from Aspergillus cleistothecia by rolling them with forceps across an agar surface, particularly when large numbers must be cleaned. It can be even more challenging to teach the skill to others, especially to a whole class of easily discouraged undergraduates, who may be seeing their first high-mag image of forceps tips at the same time as their first view of a cleistothecium. The tips of forceps are sharp and rough, and the hands that wield them often shaky. A peridium is no match for an ill-aimed poke or slash. We find, however, that cleistothecia can be cleaned very rapidly, with reduced breakage, and with minimal contamination by doing away with forceps altogether and using instead the tools that nature gave us “at our fingertips”. Indeed they are our fingertips themselves. The method is simply to roll cleistothecia briefly and firmly around the surface of a 4% agar plate (with or without diatomaceous earth per Kaminskyj and Hamer, 1996, Fungal Genetics Newsletter 43:71) beneath a well-cleaned fingertip. A few seconds’ rubbing in a circle about an inch in diameter is all that is required. The pressure of the finger is spread evenly, and the cleistothecia only rarely break. For increased efficiency, several cleistothecia can be rubbed at once beneath a single fingertip. Soap-andwater washing, followed by two or three 10-second immersions of the finger in 95% alcohol, with Kimwipe-drying after each immersion, is sufficient in our experience to reduce levels of bacterial contamination to no more than those observed when using flamed forceps – i.e., essentially none. Published by New Prairie Press, 2017


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2007

The protein kinase C orthologue PkcA plays a role in cell wall integrity and polarized growth in Aspergillus nidulans

Annette G. Teepe; Darlene M. Loprete; Zhu-Mei He; Timothy A. Hoggard; Terry W. Hill


Mycologia | 2006

Isolation of cell wall mutants in Aspergillus nidulans by screening for hypersensitivity to Calcofluor White

Terry W. Hill; Darlene M. Loprete; Michelle Momany; Young-sil Ha; Lisa M. Harsch; Jennifer A. Livesay; Amit Mirchandani; Jeremy J. Murdock; Michael J. Vaughan; Mridula B. Watt


Canadian Journal of Microbiology | 2002

Proteolytic release of membrane-bound endo-(1,4)-β-glucanase activity associated with cell wall softening in Achlya ambisexualis

Terry W. Hill; Darlene M. Loprete; Kim N Vu; Susan P. Bayat Mokhtari; L Vanessa Hardin


The FASEB Journal | 2010

Signaling through the Aspergillus nidulans orthologue of PKC mediates septum formation

Erinn Ogburn; Terry W. Hill; Darlene M. Loprete; Britanny Chavez; Chassidy J. Groover; Michael Pluta

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A.C. Gauthier

Armstrong State University

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A.J. Ravita

Armstrong State University

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