Publication Type Journal Article
Title Insights into the Mechanisms of Toxicity and Tolerance to the Agricultural Fungicide Mancozeb in Yeast, as Suggested by a Chemogenomic Approach
Authors Paulo J. Dias Miguel C. Teixeira J. P. Telo Isabel Sa-Correia
Groups BioMol
Journal OMICS-A JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY
Year 2010
Month April
Volume 14
Number 2
Pages 211-227
Abstract Saccharomyces cerevisiae was used to uncover the mechanisms underlying tolerance and toxicity of the agricultural fungicide mancozeb, linked to cancer and Parkinson s disease development. Chemogenomics screening of a yeast deletion mutant collection revealed 286 genes that provide protection against mancozeb toxicity. The most significant Gene Ontology (GO) terms enriched in this dataset are associated to transcriptional machinery, vacuolar organization and biogenesis, intracellular trafficking, and cellular pH regulation. Clustering based on physical and genetic interactions further highlighted the role of oxidative stress response, protein degradation and carbohydrate/energy metabolism in mancozeb stress tolerance. Mancozeb was found to act in yeast as a thiol-reactive compound, but not as a free radical or reative oxygen species (ROS) inducer, leading to massive oxidation of protein cysteins, consistent with the requirement of genes involved in glutathione biosynthesis and reduction and in protein degradation to provide mancozeb resistance. The identification of Botrytis cinerea homologues of yeast mancozeb tolerance determinants is expected to guide studies on mancozeb mechanisms of action and tolerance in phytopathogenic fungi. The generated networks of protein-protein associations of yeast mancozeb tolerance determinants and their human orthologues share a high degree of similarity. This toxicogenomics analysis may, thus, increase the understanding of mancozeb toxicity and adaptation mechanisms in humans.
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/omi.2009.0134
ISBN
Publisher MARY ANN LIEBERT INC
Book Title
ISSN 1536-2310
EISSN
Conference Name
Bibtex ID ISI:000276507500009
Observations
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