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Featured researches published by Tamás Emri.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2005

Antifungal Protein PAF Severely Affects the Integrity of the Plasma Membrane of Aspergillus nidulans and Induces an Apoptosis-Like Phenotype

Éva Leiter; Henrietta Szappanos; Christoph Oberparleiter; Lydia Kaiserer; László Csernoch; Tünde Pusztahelyi; Tamás Emri; István Pócsi; Willibald Salvenmoser; Florentine Marx

ABSTRACT The small, basic, and cysteine-rich antifungal protein PAF is abundantly secreted into the supernatant by the β-lactam producer Penicillium chrysogenum. PAF inhibits the growth of various important plant and zoopathogenic filamentous fungi. Previous studies revealed the active internalization of the antifungal protein and the induction of multifactorial detrimental effects, which finally resulted in morphological changes and growth inhibition in target fungi. In the present study, we offer detailed insights into the mechanism of action of PAF and give evidence for the induction of a programmed cell death-like phenotype. We proved the hyperpolarization of the plasma membrane in PAF-treated Aspergillus nidulans hyphae by using the aminonaphtylethenylpyridinium dye di-8-ANEPPS. The exposure of phosphatidylserine on the surface of A. nidulans protoplasts by Annexin V staining and the detection of DNA strand breaks by TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling) gave evidence for a PAF-induced apoptotic-like mechanism in A. nidulans. The localization of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate and the abnormal cellular ultrastructure analyzed by transmission electron microscopy suggested that ROS-elicited membrane damage and the disintegration of mitochondria played a major role in the cytotoxicity of PAF. Finally, the reduced PAF sensitivity of A. nidulans strain FGSC1053, which carries a dominant-interfering mutation in fadA, supported our assumption that G-protein signaling was involved in PAF-mediated toxicity.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 1997

GLUTATHIONE METABOLISM AND PROTECTION AGAINST OXIDATIVE STRESS CAUSED BY PEROXIDES IN PENICILLIUM CHRYSOGENUM

Tamás Emri; István Pócsi; Attila Szentirmai

The filamentous fungus Penicillium chrysogenum showed remarkable resistance to the oxidative stress caused by high concentrations of either hydrogen peroxide (0.35-0.70 M) or tert-butyl hydroperoxide (tert-BOOH, 0.5-2.0 mM), which could be explained well with high levels of glutathione (GSH) peroxidase and catalase activities. The majority of exogenous H2O2 was likely removed by catalase from the cells while tert-BOOH was likely eliminated mainly by the GSH-dependent pathways. The GSH pool decreased considerably at high tert-BOOH concentrations, the glutathione disulphide (GSSG) pool increased at high H2O2 and tert-BOOH concentrations, meanwhile all the peroxide concentrations tested increased markedly the intracellular peroxide concentration. All the enzyme activities taking part in the glutathione metabolism (glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase and glutathione producing activities) except glutathione S-transferase increased significantly after exposing mycelia to both peroxides while the specific glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and catalase activities remained unchanged. In the presence of 0.5 mM diamide both GSSG and GSH concentrations as well as the glutathione reductase and glutathione producing activities were elevated but no significant changes were found in the intracellular peroxide concentration or in any of the other enzyme activities examined.


BMC Genomics | 2005

Comparison of gene expression signatures of diamide, H2O2 and menadione exposed Aspergillus nidulans cultures – linking genome-wide transcriptional changes to cellular physiology

István Pócsi; Márton Miskei; Zsolt Karányi; Tamás Emri; Patricia Ayoubi; Tünde Pusztahelyi; György Balla; Rolf A. Prade

BackgroundIn addition to their cytotoxic nature, reactive oxygen species (ROS) are also signal molecules in diverse cellular processes in eukaryotic organisms. Linking genome-wide transcriptional changes to cellular physiology in oxidative stress-exposed Aspergillus nidulans cultures provides the opportunity to estimate the sizes of peroxide (O22-), superoxide (O2•-) and glutathione/glutathione disulphide (GSH/GSSG) redox imbalance responses.ResultsGenome-wide transcriptional changes triggered by diamide, H2O2 and menadione in A. nidulans vegetative tissues were recorded using DNA microarrays containing 3533 unique PCR-amplified probes. Evaluation of LOESS-normalized data indicated that 2499 gene probes were affected by at least one stress-inducing agent. The stress induced by diamide and H2O2 were pulse-like, with recovery after 1 h exposure time while no recovery was observed with menadione. The distribution of stress-responsive gene probes among major physiological functional categories was approximately the same for each agent. The gene group sizes solely responsive to changes in intracellular O22-, O2•- concentrations or to GSH/GSSG redox imbalance were estimated at 7.7, 32.6 and 13.0 %, respectively. Gene groups responsive to diamide, H2O2 and menadione treatments and gene groups influenced by GSH/GSSG, O22- and O2•- were only partly overlapping with distinct enrichment profiles within functional categories. Changes in the GSH/GSSG redox state influenced expression of genes coding for PBS2 like MAPK kinase homologue, PSK2 kinase homologue, AtfA transcription factor, and many elements of ubiquitin tagging, cell division cycle regulators, translation machinery proteins, defense and stress proteins, transport proteins as well as many enzymes of the primary and secondary metabolisms. Meanwhile, a separate set of genes encoding transport proteins, CpcA and JlbA amino acid starvation-responsive transcription factors, and some elements of sexual development and sporulation was ROS responsive.ConclusionThe existence of separate O22-, O2•- and GSH/GSSG responsive gene groups in a eukaryotic genome has been demonstrated. Oxidant-triggered, genome-wide transcriptional changes should be analyzed considering changes in oxidative stress-responsive physiological conditions and not correlating them directly to the chemistry and concentrations of the oxidative stress-inducing agent.


Free Radical Research | 1999

Analysis of the oxidative stress response of Penicillium chrysogenum to menadione

Tamás Emri; István Pócsi; Attila Szentirmai

The intracellular superoxide and glutathione disulphide concentrations increased in Penicillium chrysogeum treated with 50, 250 or 500 microM menadione (MQ). A significant increase in the intracellular peroxide concentration was also observed when mycelia were exposed to 250 or 500 microM MQ. The specific activity of Cu,Zn and Mn superoxide dismutases, glutathione reductase and glutathione S-transferase as well as the glutathione producing activity increased in the presence of MQ while glutathione peroxidase and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase were only induced by high intracellular peroxide levels. The glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and catalase activities did not respond to the oxidative stress caused by MQ.


Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 2008

Regulation of Autolysis in Aspergillus nidulans

Tamás Emri; Zsolt Molnár; Melinda Szilágyi; István Pócsi

In terms of cell physiology, autolysis is the centerpiece of carbon-starving fungal cultures. In the filamentous fungus model organism Aspergillus nidulans, the last step of carbon-starvation-triggered autolysis was the degradation of the cell wall of empty hyphae, and this process was independent of concomitantly progressing cell death at the level of regulation. Autolysis-related proteinase and chitinase activities were induced via FluG signaling, which initiates sporulation and inhibits vegetative growth in surface cultures of A. nidulans. Extracellular hydrolase production was also subjected to carbon repression, which was only partly dependent on CreA, the main carbon catabolite repressor in this fungus. These data support the view that one of the main functions of autolysis is supplying nutrients for sporulation, when no other sources of nutrients are available. The divergent regulation of cell death and cell wall degradation provides the fungus with the option to keep dead hyphae intact to help surviving cells to absorb biomaterials from dead neighboring cells before these are released into the extracellular space. The industrial significance of these observations is also discussed in this paper.


Microbiology | 2013

bZIP transcription factors affecting secondary metabolism, sexual development and stress responses in Aspergillus nidulans.

Wen Bing Yin; Aaron W. Reinke; Melinda Szilágyi; Tamás Emri; Yi Ming Chiang; Amy E. Keating; István Pócsi; Clay C. C. Wang; Nancy P. Keller

The eukaryotic basic leucine zipper (bZIP) transcription factors play critical roles in the organismal response to the environment. Recently, a novel YAP-like bZIP, restorer of secondary metabolism A (RsmA), was found in a suppressor screen of an Aspergillus nidulans secondary metabolism (SM) mutant in which overexpression of rsmA was found to partially remediate loss of SM in Velvet Complex mutants. The Velvet Complex is a conserved fungal transcriptional heteromer that couples SM with sexual development in fungi. Here we characterized and contrasted SM in mutants of RsmA and four other A. nidulans bZIP proteins (NapA, ZipA, ZipB and ZipC) with predicted DNA binding motifs similar to RsmA. Only two overexpression mutants exhibited both SM and sexual abnormalities that were noteworthy: OE : : rsmA resulted in a 100-fold increase in sterigmatocystin and a near loss of meiotic spore production. OE : : napA displayed decreased production of sterigmatocystin, emericellin, asperthecin, shamixanthone and epishamixanthone, coupled with a shift from sexual to asexual development. Quantification of bZIP homodimer and heterodimer formation using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) suggested that these proteins preferentially self-associate.


Folia Microbiologica | 2004

Physiological and morphological changes in autolyzing Aspergillus nidulans cultures

Tamás Emri; Zs. Molnár; Tünde Pusztahelyi; István Pócsi

Physiological and morphological changes in carbon-limited autolyzing cultures ofAspergillus nidulans were described. The carbon starvation arrested conidiation while the formation of filamentous and “yeast-like” hyphal fragments with profoundly altered metabolism enabled the fungus to survive the nutritional stress. The morphological and physiological stress responses, which maintained the cellular integrity of surviving hyphal fragments at the expense of autolyzing cells, were highly concerted and regulated. Moreover, sublethal concentrations of the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide or the mitochondrial uncoupler 2,4-dinitrophenol completely blocked the autolysis. In accordance with the propositions of the free-radical theory of ageing reactive oxygen species accumulated in the surviving fragments with a concomitant increase in the specific superoxide dismutase activity and a continuous decrease in cell viability. Glutathione was degraded extensively in carbon-starving cells due to the action of γ-glutamyltranspeptidase, which resulted in a glutathione-glutathione disulfide redox imbalance during autolysis.


Microbiology | 2013

Transcriptome changes initiated by carbon starvation in Aspergillus nidulans.

Melinda Szilágyi; Márton Miskei; Zsolt Karányi; Béla Lenkey; István Pócsi; Tamás Emri

Carbon starvation is a common stress for micro-organisms both in nature and in industry. The carbon starvation stress response (CSSR) involves the regulation of several important processes including programmed cell death and reproduction of fungi, secondary metabolite production and extracellular hydrolase formation. To gain insight into the physiological events of CSSR, DNA microarray analyses supplemented with real-time RT-PCR (rRT-PCR) experiments on 99 selected genes were performed. These data demonstrated that carbon starvation induced very complex changes in the transcriptome. Several genes contributing to protein synthesis were upregulated together with genes involved in the unfolded protein stress response. The balance between biosynthesis and degradation moved towards degradation in the case of cell wall, carbohydrate, lipid and nitrogen metabolism, which was accompanied by the production of several hydrolytic enzymes and the induction of macroautophagy. These processes provide the cultures with long-term survival by liberating nutrients through degradation of the cell constituents. The induced synthesis of secondary metabolites, antifungal enzymes and proteins as well as bacterial cell wall-degrading enzymes demonstrated that carbon-starving fungi should have marked effects on the micro-organisms in their surroundings. Due to the increased production of extracellular and vacuolar enzymes during carbon starvation, the importance of the endoplasmic reticulum increased considerably.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2010

AtfA bZIP-type transcription factor regulates oxidative and osmotic stress responses in Aspergillus nidulans

Anita Balázs; Imre Pócsi; Zsuzsanna Hamari; Éva Leiter; Tamás Emri; Márton Miskei; Judit Oláh; Viktória Tóth; Nikoletta Hegedűs; Rolf A. Prade; Monika Molnar; István Pócsi

The aim of the study was to demonstrate that the bZIP-type transcription factor AtfA regulates different types of stress responses in Aspergillus nidulans similarly to Atf1, the orthologous ‘all-purpose’ transcription factor of Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Heterologous expression of atfA in a S. pombe Δatf1 mutant restored the osmotic stress tolerance of fission yeast in surface cultures to the same level as recorded in complementation studies with the atf1 gene, and a partial complementation of the osmotic and oxidative-stress-sensitive phenotypes was also achieved in submerged cultures. AtfA is therefore a true functional ortholog of fission yeast’s Atf1. As demonstrated by RT-PCR experiments, elements of both oxidative (e.g. catalase B) and osmotic (e.g. glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase B) stress defense systems were transcriptionally regulated by AtfA in a stress-type-specific manner. Deletion of atfA resulted in oxidative-stress-sensitive phenotypes while the high-osmolarity stress sensitivity of the fungus was not affected significantly. In A. nidulans, the glutathione/glutathione disulfide redox status of the cells as well as apoptotic cell death and autolysis seemed to be controlled by regulatory elements other than AtfA. In conclusion, the orchestrations of stress responses in the aspergilli and in fission yeast share several common features, but further studies are needed to answer the important question of whether a fission yeast-like core environmental stress response also operates in the euascomycete genus Aspergillus.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2013

Echinocandins: Production and applications

Tamás Emri; László Majoros; Viktória Tóth; István Pócsi

The first echinocandin-type antimycotic (echinocandin B) was discovered in the 1970s. It was followed by the isolation of more than 20 natural echinocandins. These cyclic lipo-hexapeptides are biosynthesized on non-ribosomal peptide synthase complexes by different ascomycota fungi. They have a unique mechanism of action; as non-competitive inhibitors of β-1,3-glucan synthase complex they target the fungal cell wall. Results of the structure–activity relationship experiments let us develop semisynthetic derivatives with improved properties. Three cyclic lipohiexapeptides (caspofungin, micafungin and anidulafungin) are currently approved for use in clinics. As they show good fungicidal (Candida spp.) or fungistatic (Aspergillus spp.) activity against the most important human pathogenic fungi including azole-resistant strains, they are an important addition to the antifungal armamentarium. Some evidence of acquired resistance against echinocandins has been detected among Candida glabrata strains in recent years, which enhanced the importance of data collected on the mechanism of acquired resistance developing against the echinocandins. In this review, we show the structural diversity of natural echinocandins, and we summarize the emerging data on their mode of action, biosynthesis and industrial production. Their clinical significance as well as the mechanism of natural and acquired resistance is also discussed.

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Éva Leiter

University of Debrecen

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Károly Antal

Eszterházy Károly College

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Jae-Hyuk Yu

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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