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. 1995 Aug 21;248(3):270-7.
doi: 10.1007/BF02191593.

The Aspergillus parasiticus polyketide synthase gene pksA, a homolog of Aspergillus nidulans wA, is required for aflatoxin B1 biosynthesis

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The Aspergillus parasiticus polyketide synthase gene pksA, a homolog of Aspergillus nidulans wA, is required for aflatoxin B1 biosynthesis

P K Chang et al. Mol Gen Genet. .

Abstract

Aflatoxins comprise a group of polyketide-derived carcinogenic mycotoxins produced by Aspergillus parasiticus and Aspergillus flavus. By transformation with a disruption construct, pXX, we disrupted the aflatoxin pathway in A. parasiticus SRRC 2043, resulting in the inability of this strain to produce aflatoxin intermediates as well as a major yellow pigment in the transformants. The disruption was attributed to a single-crossover, homologous integration event between pXX and the recipient A. parasiticus genome at a specific locus, designated pksA. Sequence analysis suggest that pksA is a homolog of the Aspergillus nidulans wA gene, a polyketide synthase gene involved in conidial wall pigment biosynthesis. The conserved beta-ketoacyl synthase, acyltransferase and acyl carrier-protein domains were present in the deduced amino acid sequence of the pksA product. No beta-ketoacyl reductase and enoyl reductase domains were found, suggesting that pksA does not encode catalytic activities for processing beta-carbon similar to those required for long chain fatty acid synthesis. The pksA gene is located in the aflatoxin pathway gene cluster and is linked to the nor-1 gene, an aflatoxin pathway gene required for converting norsolorinic acid to averantin. These two genes are divergently transcribed from a 1.5 kb intergenic region. We propose that pksA is a polyketide synthase gene required for the early steps of aflatoxin biosynthesis.

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