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A predatory fungus detects prey pheromones via G-protein-coupled receptors

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Hsueh,  Y-P       
Department Complex Biological Interactions, Max Planck Institute for Biology Tübingen, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Hsueh, Y.-P. (2024). A predatory fungus detects prey pheromones via G-protein-coupled receptors. Talk presented at Kiel Conference on Molecular Biology of Fungi 2024. Kiel, Germany. 2024-09-11 - 2024-09-13.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0010-6BB0-F
Abstract
The ability to sense prey-derived cues is essential for predatory lifestyles. Under low-nutrient conditions, Arthrobotrys oligospora and other nematode-trapping fungi develop dedicated structures for nematode capture when exposed to nematode-derived cues, including a conserved family of pheromones, the ascarosides. A. oligospora senses ascarosides via conserved MAPK and cAMP–PKA pathways; however, the upstream receptors remain unknown. Here, using genomic, transcriptomic and functional analyses, we identified two families of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) involved in sensing distinct nematode-derived cues. GPCRs homologous to yeast glucose receptors are required for ascaroside sensing, whereas Pth11-like GPCRs contribute to ascaroside-independent nematode sensing. Both GPCR classes activate conserved cAMP–PKA signalling to trigger trap development. This work demonstrates that predatory fungi use multiple GPCRs to sense several distinct nematode-derived cues for prey recognition and to enable a switch to a predatory lifestyle. Identification of these receptors reveals the molecular mechanisms of cross-kingdom communication via conserved pheromones also sensed by plants and animals.