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Featured researches published by Zhongtao Zhao.


PLOS Pathogens | 2011

Functional analysis of the kinome of the wheat scab fungus Fusarium graminearum.

Chenfang Wang; Shijie Zhang; Rui Hou; Zhongtao Zhao; Qian Zheng; Qijun Xu; Dawei Zheng; Guanghui Wang; Huiquan Liu; Xuli Gao; Ji Wen Ma; H. Corby Kistler; Zhensheng Kang; Jin-Rong Xu

As in other eukaryotes, protein kinases play major regulatory roles in filamentous fungi. Although the genomes of many plant pathogenic fungi have been sequenced, systematic characterization of their kinomes has not been reported. The wheat scab fungus Fusarium graminearum has 116 protein kinases (PK) genes. Although twenty of them appeared to be essential, we generated deletion mutants for the other 96 PK genes, including 12 orthologs of essential genes in yeast. All of the PK mutants were assayed for changes in 17 phenotypes, including growth, conidiation, pathogenesis, stress responses, and sexual reproduction. Overall, deletion of 64 PK genes resulted in at least one of the phenotypes examined, including three mutants blocked in conidiation and five mutants with increased tolerance to hyperosmotic stress. In total, 42 PK mutants were significantly reduced in virulence or non-pathogenic, including mutants deleted of key components of the cAMP signaling and three MAPK pathways. A number of these PK genes, including Fg03146 and Fg04770 that are unique to filamentous fungi, are dispensable for hyphal growth and likely encode novel fungal virulence factors. Ascospores play a critical role in the initiation of wheat scab. Twenty-six PK mutants were blocked in perithecia formation or aborted in ascosporogenesis. Additional 19 mutants were defective in ascospore release or morphology. Interestingly, F. graminearum contains two aurora kinase genes with distinct functions, which has not been reported in fungi. In addition, we used the interlog approach to predict the PK-PK and PK-protein interaction networks of F. graminearum. Several predicted interactions were verified with yeast two-hybrid or co-immunoprecipitation assays. To our knowledge, this is the first functional characterization of the kinome in plant pathogenic fungi. Protein kinase genes important for various aspects of growth, developmental, and infection processes in F. graminearum were identified in this study.


Nature Communications | 2013

High genome heterozygosity and endemic genetic recombination in the wheat stripe rust fungus

Wenming Zheng; Lili Huang; Jinqun Huang; Xiaojie Wang; Xianming Chen; Jie Zhao; Jun Guo; Hua Zhuang; Chuangzhao Qiu; Jie Liu; Huiquan Liu; Xueling Huang; Guoliang Pei; Gangming Zhan; Chunlei Tang; Yulin Cheng; Minjie Liu; Jinshan Zhang; Zhongtao Zhao; Shijie Zhang; Qingmei Han; Dejun Han; Hongchang Zhang; Jing Zhao; Xiaoning Gao; Jianfeng Wang; Peixiang Ni; Wei Dong; Linfeng Yang; Huanming Yang

Stripe rust, caused by Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici (Pst), is one of the most destructive diseases of wheat. Here we report a 110-Mb draft sequence of Pst isolate CY32, obtained using a ‘fosmid-to-fosmid’ strategy, to better understand its race evolution and pathogenesis. The Pst genome is highly heterozygous and contains 25,288 protein-coding genes. Compared with non-obligate fungal pathogens, Pst has a more diverse gene composition and more genes encoding secreted proteins. Re-sequencing analysis indicates significant genetic variation among six isolates collected from different continents. Approximately 35% of SNPs are in the coding sequence regions, and half of them are non-synonymous. High genetic diversity in Pst suggests that sexual reproduction has an important role in the origin of different regional races. Our results show the effectiveness of the ‘fosmid-to-fosmid’ strategy for sequencing dikaryotic genomes and the feasibility of genome analysis to understand race evolution in Pst and other obligate pathogens.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Molecular evolution and functional divergence of tubulin superfamily in the fungal tree of life

Zhongtao Zhao; Huiquan Liu; Yongping Luo; Shanyue Zhou; Lin An; Chenfang Wang; Qiaojun Jin; Mingguo Zhou; Jin-Rong Xu

Microtubules are essential for various cellular activities and β-tubulins are the target of benzimidazole fungicides. However, the evolution and molecular mechanisms driving functional diversification in fungal tubulins are not clear. In this study, we systematically identified tubulin genes from 59 representative fungi across the fungal kingdom. Phylogenetic analysis showed that α-/β-tubulin genes underwent multiple independent duplications and losses in different fungal lineages and formed distinct paralogous/orthologous clades. The last common ancestor of basidiomycetes and ascomycetes likely possessed two paralogs of α-tubulin (α1/α2) and β-tubulin (β1/β2) genes but α2-tubulin genes were lost in basidiomycetes and β2-tubulin genes were lost in most ascomycetes. Molecular evolutionary analysis indicated that α1, α2, and β2-tubulins have been under strong divergent selection and adaptive positive selection. Many positively selected sites are at or adjacent to important functional sites and likely contribute to functional diversification. We further experimentally confirmed functional divergence of two β-tubulins in Fusarium and identified type II variations in FgTub2 responsible for function shifts. In this study, we also identified δ-/ε-/η-tubulins in Chytridiomycetes. Overall, our results illustrated that different evolutionary mechanisms drive functional diversification of α-/β-tubulin genes in different fungal lineages, and residues under positive selection could provide targets for further experimental study.


Journal of Plant Pathology | 2013

IDENTIFICATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF THE CAUSAL AGENT OF BACTERIAL CANKER OF KIWIFRUIT IN THE SHAANXI PROVINCE OF CHINA

Zhongtao Zhao; Xiaoning Gao; Q.L. Huang; Lili Huang; Huqiang Qin; Zhensheng Kang

Bacterial canker of kiwifruit has become a serious disease problem in many countries, including China, but the causal agent in China has not yet been sufficiently characterized. In this study, the aetiology of bacterial canker was investigated in woody vines and leaves of the kiwifruit species Actinidia chinensis and A. deliciosa in the Chinese province of Shaanxi. Symptoms on woody vines appeared from September to June of the following year, and on leaves during May-July and September-October. More than 300 bacterial isolates were obtained from seven cultivars. Pure cultures were identified as Pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae (Psa) based on pathogenicity as well as morphological, physiological, biochemical, and genetic characteristics. In pathogenicity assays, symptoms on branches and leaves similar to those observed in the field on A. chinensis cv. Hongyang and A. deliciosa cv. Xuxiang 15 days post inoculation. The 16S rDNA sequences were 99.9% identical to those of the Psa strains available in GenBank. In addition, PCR analyses with five pairs of pathovar-specific primers provided a further proof of identification. Repetitive-sequence PCR fingerprint patterns of Psa strains isolated in Shaanxi using ERIC and BOX primer sets were consistent with those from New Zealand (2010) and Italy (2009), but slightly different from that of the Psa strain ICMP 9853 (Japan, 1984). The conclusion is that the causal agent of bacterial canker of kiwifruit in Shaanxi was identified as Psa strain identical with those currently spreading in New Zealand and Italy.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Identification of a fungi-specific lineage of protein kinases closely related to tyrosine kinases.

Zhongtao Zhao; Qiaojun Jin; Jin-Rong Xu; Huiquan Liu

Tyrosine kinases (TKs) specifically catalyze the phosphorylation of tyrosine residues in proteins and play essential roles in many cellular processes. Although TKs mainly exist in animals, recent studies revealed that some organisms outside the Opisthokont clade also contain TKs. The fungi, as the sister group to animals, are thought to lack TKs. To better understand the origin and evolution of TKs, it is important to investigate if fungi have TK or TK-related genes. We therefore systematically identified possible TKs across the fungal kingdom by using the profile hidden Markov Models searches and phylogenetic analyses. Our results confirmed that fungi lack the orthologs of animal TKs. We identified a fungi-specific lineage of protein kinases (FslK) that appears to be a sister group closely related to TKs. Sequence analysis revealed that members of the FslK clade contain all the conserved protein kinase sub-domains and thus are likely enzymatically active. However, they lack key amino acid residues that determine TK-specific activities, indicating that they are not true TKs. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the last common ancestor of fungi may have possessed numerous members of FslK. The ancestral FslK genes were lost in Ascomycota and Ustilaginomycotina and Pucciniomycotina of Basidiomycota during evolution. Most of these ancestral genes, however, were retained and expanded in Agaricomycetes. The discovery of the fungi-specific lineage of protein kinases closely related to TKs helps shed light on the origin and evolution of TKs and also has potential implications for the importance of these kinases in mushroom fungi.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016

Evolution and Functional Insights of Different Ancestral Orthologous Clades of Chitin Synthase Genes in the Fungal Tree of Life.

Mu Li; Cong Jiang; Qinhu Wang; Zhongtao Zhao; Qiaojun Jin; Jin-Rong Xu; Huiquan Liu

Chitin synthases (CHSs) are key enzymes in the biosynthesis of chitin, an important structural component of fungal cell walls that can trigger innate immune responses in host plants and animals. Members of CHS gene family perform various functions in fungal cellular processes. Previous studies focused primarily on classifying diverse CHSs into different classes, regardless of their functional diversification, or on characterizing their functions in individual fungal species. A complete and systematic comparative analysis of CHS genes based on their orthologous relationships will be valuable for elucidating the evolution and functions of different CHS genes in fungi. Here, we identified and compared members of the CHS gene family across the fungal tree of life, including 18 divergent fungal lineages. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the fungal CHS gene family is comprised of at least 10 ancestral orthologous clades, which have undergone multiple independent duplications and losses in different fungal lineages during evolution. Interestingly, one of these CHS clades (class III) was expanded in plant or animal pathogenic fungi belonging to different fungal lineages. Two clades (classes VIb and VIc) identified for the first time in this study occurred mainly in plant pathogenic fungi from Sordariomycetes and Dothideomycetes. Moreover, members of classes III and VIb were specifically up-regulated during plant infection, suggesting important roles in pathogenesis. In addition, CHS-associated networks conserved among plant pathogenic fungi are involved in various biological processes, including sexual reproduction and plant infection. We also identified specificity-determining sites, many of which are located at or adjacent to important structural and functional sites that are potentially responsible for functional divergence of different CHS classes. Overall, our results provide new insights into the evolution and function of members of CHS gene family in the fungal kingdom. Specificity-determining sites identified here may be attractive targets for further structural and experimental studies.


Acta Metallurgica Sinica (english Letters) | 2017

Effect of Base Material on Microstructure and Texture Evolution of a Ti–6Al–4V Electron-Beam Welded Joint

Guoqiang Wang; Zhongtao Zhao; Biao Yu; Jian Liu; Q.J. Wang; Jixiang Zhang; R. Yang; J. W. Li

The effect of base material (BM) on microstructure and crystallographic orientation evolution of a Ti–6Al–4V electron-beam welded joint was investigated. Meanwhile, the crystallographic orientation of prior β grains was studied by advanced electron backscattered diffraction data processing. The inhomogeneity of microstructure within welded joint was formed due to the different microstructures of BM. By comparing microstructure details of the welded joint, including microstructure morphology and crystallographic orientation with those of the base material, it can be found that both the microstructure morphology and crystallographic orientation of the EBW joint would be controlled by BM.


BMC Genomics | 2013

Comparative analysis of fungal genomes reveals different plant cell wall degrading capacity in fungi

Zhongtao Zhao; Huiquan Liu; Chenfang Wang; Jin-Rong Xu


Acta Materialia | 2017

Effect of β (110) texture intensity on α-variant selection and microstructure morphology during β→α phase transformation in near α titanium alloy

Zhongtao Zhao; Q.J. Wang; Q. M. Hu; Jian Liu; Biao Yu; R. Yang


Acta Materialia | 2017

Effect of heat treatment on the crystallographic orientation evolution in a near-α titanium alloy Ti60

Zhongtao Zhao; Q.J. Wang; Jian Liu; R. Yang

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R. Yang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Q.J. Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Biao Yu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jinlei Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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