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Dive into the research topics where Susanne Zeilinger is active.

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Featured researches published by Susanne Zeilinger.


Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2011

Trichoderma: the genomics of opportunistic success

Irina S. Druzhinina; Alfredo Herrera-Estrella; Benjamin A. Horwitz; Charles M. Kenerley; Enrique Monte; Prasun K. Mukherjee; Susanne Zeilinger; Igor V. Grigoriev; Christian P. Kubicek

Trichoderma is a genus of common filamentous fungi that display a remarkable range of lifestyles and interactions with other fungi, animals and plants. Because of their ability to antagonize plant-pathogenic fungi and to stimulate plant growth and defence responses, some Trichoderma strains are used for biological control of plant diseases. In this Review, we discuss recent advances in molecular ecology and genomics which indicate that the interactions of Trichoderma spp. with animals and plants may have evolved as a result of saprotrophy on fungal biomass (mycotrophy) and various forms of parasitism on other fungi (mycoparasitism), combined with broad environmental opportunism.


Genome Biology | 2011

Comparative genome sequence analysis underscores mycoparasitism as the ancestral life style of Trichoderma

Christian P. Kubicek; Alfredo Herrera-Estrella; Diego Martinez; Irina S. Druzhinina; Michael R. Thon; Susanne Zeilinger; Sergio Casas-Flores; Benjamin A. Horwitz; Prasun K. Mukherjee; Mala Mukherjee; László Kredics; Luis David Alcaraz; Andrea Aerts; Zsuzsanna Antal; Lea Atanasova; Mayte Guadalupe Cervantes-Badillo; Jean F. Challacombe; Olga Chertkov; Kevin McCluskey; Fanny Coulpier; Nandan Deshpande; Hans von Döhren; Daniel J. Ebbole; Edgardo U. Esquivel-Naranjo; Erzsébet Fekete; Michel Flipphi; Fabian Glaser; Elida Yazmín Gómez-Rodríguez; Sabine Gruber; Cliff Han

BackgroundMycoparasitism, a lifestyle where one fungus is parasitic on another fungus, has special relevance when the prey is a plant pathogen, providing a strategy for biological control of pests for plant protection. Probably, the most studied biocontrol agents are species of the genus Hypocrea/Trichoderma.ResultsHere we report an analysis of the genome sequences of the two biocontrol species Trichoderma atroviride (teleomorph Hypocrea atroviridis) and Trichoderma virens (formerly Gliocladium virens, teleomorph Hypocrea virens), and a comparison with Trichoderma reesei (teleomorph Hypocrea jecorina). These three Trichoderma species display a remarkable conservation of gene order (78 to 96%), and a lack of active mobile elements probably due to repeat-induced point mutation. Several gene families are expanded in the two mycoparasitic species relative to T. reesei or other ascomycetes, and are overrepresented in non-syntenic genome regions. A phylogenetic analysis shows that T. reesei and T. virens are derived relative to T. atroviride. The mycoparasitism-specific genes thus arose in a common Trichoderma ancestor but were subsequently lost in T. reesei.ConclusionsThe data offer a better understanding of mycoparasitism, and thus enforce the development of improved biocontrol strains for efficient and environmentally friendly protection of plants.


FEBS Letters | 1995

Crel, the carbon catabolite repressor protein from Trichoderma reesei

Joseph Strauss; Robert L. Mach; Susanne Zeilinger; Gernot Hartler; Georg Stöffler; Markus Wolschek; Christian P. Kubicek

In order to investigate the mechanism of carbon catabolite repression in the industrially important fungus Trichoderma reesei, degenerated PCR‐primers were designed to amplify a 0.7‐bp fragment of the crel gene, which was used to clone the entire gene. It encodes a 402‐amino acid protein with a calculated M r, of 43.6 kDa. Its aa‐sequence shows 55.6% and 54.7% overall similarity to the corresponding genes of Aspergillus nidulans and A. niger, respectively. Similarity was restricted to the aa‐region containing the C2H2 zinc finger and several aa‐regions rich in proline and basic amino acids, which may be involved in the interaction with other proteins. Another aa‐region rich in the SPXX‐motif that has been considered analogous to a region of yeast RGR1p, was instead identified as a domain occurring in several eucaryotic transcription factors. The presence of the crel translation product was demonstrated with polyclonal antibodies against Cre1, which identified a protein of 43 (±2) kDa in cell‐free extracts from T. reesei. A Cre1 protein fragment from the two zinc fingers to the region similar to the aa‐sequence of eucaryotic transcription factors, was expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with glutathione S‐transferase. EMSA and in vitro footprinting revealed binding of the fusion protein to the sequence 5′‐GCGGAG‐3′, which matches well with the A. nidulans consensus sequence for CreA binding (5′‐SYGGRG‐3′). Cell‐free extracts of T. reesei formed different complexes with DNA‐fragments carrying this binding sites, and the presence of Cre1 and additional proteins in these complexes was demonstrated. We conclude that T. reesei Cre1 is the functional homologue of Aspergillus CreA and that it binds to its target sequence probably as a protein complex.


Molecular Microbiology | 1996

Carbon catabolite repression of xylanase I (xyn1) gene expression in Trichoderma reesei

Robert L. Mach; Joseph Strauss; Susanne Zeilinger; Martin Schindler; Christian P. Kubicek

The filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei forms two specific, xylan‐inducible xylanases encoded by xyn1 and xyn2 to degrade the β‐1,4‐d‐xylan backbone of hemicelluloses. This enzyme system is formed in the presence of xylan, but not glucose. The molecular basis of the absence of xylanase I formation on glucose was the purpose of this study. Northern blotting of the xyn1 transcript as well as the use of the Escherichia coli hygromycin B phosphotransferase‐encoding gene (hph) as a reporter consistently showed that the basal expression of xyn1 was affected by glucose, whereas its induction by xylan remained uninfluenced. The repression of basal xyn1 transcription is mediated by the carbon catabolite repressor protein Cre1, which in vivo binds to two of four consensus sites (5‐SYG‐GRG‐3) in the xyn1 promoter, which occurred in the form of an inverted repeat. T. reesei strains, bearing a xynlv. hph reporter construct, in which four nucleotides from the middle of the inverted repeat had been removed, expressed hph on glucose at a level comparable to that observed during growth on a carbon catabolite derepressing carbon source. Northern analysis of xynl expression in a T. reesei mutant strain (RUT C‐30), which contains a truncated, non‐functional crel gene, also confirmed basal transcription of xyn1. In this strain, xyn1 transcription was still inducible by xylose or xylan to an even higher degree than in the wild‐type strain, suggesting that induction overcomes glucose repression at the level of xynl expression. Based on these data, we postulate that basal transcription of xyn1 is repressed by glucose and mediated by an inverted repeat of the consensus motif for Cre1‐mediated carbon catabolite repression.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Improvement of the Fungal Biocontrol Agent Trichoderma atroviride To Enhance both Antagonism and Induction of Plant Systemic Disease Resistance

Kurt Brunner; Susanne Zeilinger; Rosalia Ciliento; Sheridian L. Woo; Matteo Lorito; Christian P. Kubicek; Robert L. Mach

ABSTRACT Biocontrol agents generally do not perform well enough under field conditions to compete with chemical fungicides. We determined whether transgenic strain SJ3-4 of Trichoderma atroviride, which expresses the Aspergillus niger glucose oxidase-encoding gene, goxA, under a homologous chitinase (nag1) promoter had increased capabilities as a fungal biocontrol agent. The transgenic strain differed only slightly from the wild-type in sporulation or the growth rate. goxA expression occurred immediately after contact with the plant pathogen, and the glucose oxidase formed was secreted. SJ3-4 had significantly less N-acetylglucosaminidase and endochitinase activities than its nontransformed parent. Glucose oxidase-containing culture filtrates exhibited threefold-greater inhibition of germination of spores of Botrytis cinerea. The transgenic strain also more quickly overgrew and lysed the plant pathogens Rhizoctonia solani and Pythium ultimum. In planta, SJ3-4 had no detectable improved effect against low inoculum levels of these pathogens. Beans planted in heavily infested soil and treated with conidia of the transgenic Trichoderma strain germinated, but beans treated with wild-type spores did not germinate. SJ3-4 also was more effective in inducing systemic resistance in plants. Beans with SJ3-4 root protection were highly resistant to leaf lesions caused by the foliar pathogen B. cinerea. This work demonstrates that heterologous genes driven by pathogen-inducible promoters can increase the biocontrol and systemic resistance-inducing properties of fungal biocontrol agents, such as Trichoderma spp., and that these microbes can be used as vectors to provide plants with useful molecules (e.g., glucose oxidase) that can increase their resistance to pathogens.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2010

Identification and profiling of volatile metabolites of the biocontrol fungus Trichoderma atroviride by HS-SPME-GC-MS

Norbert Stoppacher; Bernhard Kluger; Susanne Zeilinger; Rudolf Krska; Rainer Schuhmacher

In the present study we describe a method, which is based on solid phase microextraction (SPME) coupled to gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and which can be used for the profiling of microbial volatile organic compounds (MVOCs) in the headspace (HS) of cultures of filamentous fungi. The method comprises the following successive steps: 1. growth of the fungus on a solid culture medium directly in headspace vials, 2. measurement of volatiles by HS-SPME-GC-MS, 3. deconvolution of mass spectra, 4. identification of volatiles by comparison of measured, deconvoluted mass spectra and linear temperature programmed retention indices (LTPRI) on two stationary GC phases with database entries and LTPRI published in the literature, and 5. profiling of the identified MVOCs. The developed method was successfully applied to cultures of the biocontrol fungus Trichoderma atroviride. An in-house library consisting of mass spectra and LTPRI values of fungal VOCs was established and used to study the profiles of MVOCs of this fungus. In total, 25 different MVOCs were identified by applying strict criteria (spectral match factor at least 90% and a maximum relative deviation of LTPRI of +/-2% from literature values). The MVOCs were assigned to the compound classes of alcohols, ketones, alkanes, furanes, pyrones (mainly the bioactive 6-pentyl-alpha-pyrone), mono- and sesquiterpenes, 13 of which have never been reported to be produced by Trichoderma spp. before. Eleven of these volatiles have been additionally confirmed using authentic standards. Finally, time course experiments and cultivation of T. atroviride in the presence of the mycotoxin fusaric acid demonstrated the potential of the method to study the dynamics of MVOC profiles as well as the effect of different environmental/biological conditions on the expression of MVOCs of filamentous fungi.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

In Vivo Study of Trichoderma-Pathogen-Plant Interactions, Using Constitutive and Inducible Green Fluorescent Protein Reporter Systems

Zexun Lu; Riccardo Tombolini; Sheridan Woo; Susanne Zeilinger; Matteo Lorito; Janet K. Jansson

ABSTRACT Plant tissue colonization by Trichoderma atroviride plays a critical role in the reduction of diseases caused by phytopathogenic fungi, but this process has not been thoroughly studied in situ. We monitored in situ interactions between gfp-tagged biocontrol strains of T. atroviride and soilborne plant pathogens that were grown in cocultures and on cucumber seeds by confocal scanning laser microscopy and fluorescence stereomicroscopy. Spores of T. atroviride adhered to Pythium ultimum mycelia in coculture experiments. In mycoparasitic interactions of T. atroviride with P. ultimum or Rhizoctonia solani, the mycoparasitic hyphae grew alongside the pathogen mycelia, and this was followed by coiling and formation of specialized structures similar to hooks, appressoria, and papillae. The morphological changes observed depended on the pathogen tested. Branching of T. atroviride mycelium appeared to be an active response to the presence of the pathogenic host. Mycoparasitism of P. ultimum by T. atroviride occurred on cucumber seed surfaces while the seeds were germinating. The interaction of these fungi on the cucumber seeds was similar to the interaction observed in coculture experiments. Green fluorescent protein expression under the control of host-inducible promoters was also studied. The induction of specific Trichoderma genes was monitored visually in cocultures, on plant surfaces, and in soil in the presence of colloidal chitin or Rhizoctonia by confocal microscopy and fluorescence stereomicroscopy. These tools allowed initiation of the mycoparasitic gene expression cascade to be monitored in vivo.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Different Inducibility of Expression of the Two Xylanase Genes xyn1 and xyn2 in Trichoderma reesei

Susanne Zeilinger; Robert L. Mach; Martin Schindler; Petra Herzog; Christian P. Kubicek

Regulation of formation of the extracellular xylanase system of Trichoderma reesei QM 9414 during growth on xylan, cellulose, and replacement onto a number of soluble inducers was investigated by Northern analysis of xyn1 and xyn2 transcripts and by the use of the Escherichia coli hph (hygromycin B-phosphotransferase-encoding) gene as a reporter. Whereas the xyn1 promoter is active in the presence of xylan and xylose, and virtually silenced in the presence of glucose, the xyn2 promoter enables basal transcription at a low level, but is enhanced in the presence of xylan and xylobiose and also of sophorose or cellobiose. The respective regulatory nucleotide regions were localized on a 221-base pair fragment and a 55-base pair fragment of the xyn1 and xyn2 5′-upstream noncoding sequences, respectively. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays, using cell-free extracts, identified induction-specific protein-DNA complexes: one complex of high mobility was observed under basal, noninduced conditions (glucose) with xyn2, which was in part replaced by a slow-migrating complex upon induction by xylan or sophorose. Both complexes bound to a CCAAT box. With xyn1, the induced complex also binds to a CCAAT box, but this binding is not observed in the presence of the carbon catabolite repressor Cre1, which binds to a nearby located consensus motif.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2006

Transcriptional Regulation of xyn1, Encoding Xylanase I, in Hypocrea jecorina

Roman Rauscher; Elisabeth Würleitner; Christian Wacenovsky; Nina Aro; Astrid R. Stricker; Susanne Zeilinger; Christian P. Kubicek; Merja Penttilä; Robert L. Mach

ABSTRACT Two major xylanases (XYN I and XYN II) of the filamentous fungus Hypocrea jecorina (Trichoderma reesei) are simultaneously expressed during growth on xylan but respond differently to low-molecular-weight inducers. In vivo footprinting analysis of the xylanase1 (xyn1) promoter revealed three different nucleotide sequences (5′-GGCTAAATGCGACATCTTAGCC-3′ [an inverted repeat of GGCTAA spaced by 10 bp], 5′-CCAAT-3′, and 5′-GGGGTCTAGACCCC-3′ [equivalent to a double Cre1 site]) used to bind proteins. Binding to the Cre1 site is only observed under repressed conditions, whereas binding to the two other motifs is constitutive. Applying heterologously expressed components of the H. jecorina cellulase regulators Ace1 and Ace2 and the xylanase regulator Xyr1 suggests that Ace1 and Xyr1 but not Ace2 contact both GGCTAA motifs. H. jecorina transformants containing mutated versions of the xyn1 promoter, leading to elimination of protein binding to the left or the right GGCTAA box revealed either strongly reduced or completely eliminated induction of transcription. Elimination of Cre1 binding to its target released the basal transcriptional level from glucose repression but did not influence the inducibility of xyn1 expression. Mutation of the CCAAT box prevents binding of the Hap2/3/5 complex in vitro and is partially compensating for the loss of transcription caused by the mutation of the right GGCTAA box. Finally, evidence for a competition of Ace1 and Xyr1 for the right GGCTAA box is given. These data prompted us to hypothesize that xyn1 regulation is based on the interplay of Cre1 and Ace1 as a general and specific repressor with Xyr1 as transactivator.


Current Genetics | 2003

The Nag1 N -acetylglucosaminidase of Trichoderma atroviride is essential for chitinase induction by chitin and of major relevance to biocontrol

Kurt Brunner; Clemens K. Peterbauer; Robert L. Mach; Matteo Lorito; Susanne Zeilinger; Christian P. Kubicek

Abstract The nag1 gene of the mycoparasitic fungus Trichoderma atroviride encodes a 73-kDa N-acetyl-β-d-glucosaminidase, which is secreted into the medium and partially bound to the cell wall. To elucidate the role of this enzyme in chitinase induction and biocontrol, a nag1-disruption mutant was prepared. It displayed only 4% of the original N-acetyl-β-d-glucosaminidase activity, indicating that the nag1 gene product accounts for the majority of this activity in T. atroviride. The nag1-disruption strain was indistinguishable from the parent strain in growth and morphology, but exhibited delayed autolysis. Northern analysis showed that colloidal chitin disruption does not induce ech42 gene transcription in the nag1-disruption strain. Enzyme activities capable of hydrolysing p-nitrophenyl-N,N′-diacetylchitobioside and p-nitrophenyl-N,N′-diacetylchitotriose were also absent from the nag1-disruption strain under the same conditions. Retransformation of the T. atroviride nag1-disruption strain with the nag1 gene essentially led to the parent-type behaviour in all these experiments. However, addition of N-acetyl-β-d-glucosaminidase to the medium of the nag1-disruption strain did not rescue the mutant phenotype. The disruption-nag1 strain showed 30% reduced ability to protect beans against infection by Rhizoctonia solani and Sclerotinia sclerotiorum. The data indicate that nag1 is essential for triggering chitinase gene expression in T. atroviride and that its functional impairment reduces biocontrol by T. atroviride by a significant extent.

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Christian P. Kubicek

Vienna University of Technology

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Robert L. Mach

Vienna University of Technology

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Vijai Kumar Gupta

National University of Ireland

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Markus Omann

Vienna University of Technology

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Sabine Gruber

Vienna University of Technology

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Kurt Brunner

Vienna University of Technology

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Prasun K. Mukherjee

Bhabha Atomic Research Centre

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