Radhika Jain, PhD
Personal Data:
Country of Origin: India
PhD period: May 2006 - June 2011
Title:
Regulation of cell wall integrity signalling by mitogen-activated
protein kinase MpkA in Aspergillus fumigatus.
Project Leader: Prof. Dr. Axel Brakhage
Abstract:
Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades are essential signalling modules that are evolutionary conserved among eukaryotes,
and transduce stimuli from the cell surface to the nucleus. MAPK pathways control key cellular functions. In fungi three conserved
MAPK cascades have been identified, each of them carrying out specific functions in cell fusion and differentiation
(Fus3/Kss1), cell integrity (Slt2/Mpk1) or stress adaptation (Hog1). There is strong evidence that these MAPK pathways are master control switches for pathogenicity in some fungi. MAPK cascades regulate key virulence functions, including host-induced spore germination, polarized hyphal growth, adhesion to the host surface, differentiation of specialized infection structures, remodelling of the fungal cell wall or secretion of enzymes and toxins.
The genome of A. fumigatus has four MAPK genes, sakA/hogA, mpkA, mpkB and mpkC. The project aims at investigating the role of mitogen activated protein kinase MpkA in cell wall integrity (CWI) signalling in Aspergillus fumigatus.
Publications:
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Valiante V, Jain R, Heinekamp T, Brakhage AA (2009) The MpkA
MAP kinase module regulates cell wall integrity signaling
and pyomelanin formation in Aspergillus fumigatus.
Fungal Genet Biol., 909-18.
- Valiante V, Heinekamp T, Jain R, Härtl A, Brakhage AA (2008) The mitogen-activated protein kinase MpkA of Aspergillus fumigatus regulates cell wall signaling and oxidative stress response. Fungal Genet Biol., 618-27.
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