The mitochondrial bc1 complex is a membrane-bound multisubunit enzyme that catalyzes the transfer of electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c and couples this electron transfer to the vectorial translocation of protons across the inner mitochondrial membrane. Cytochrome b is the central membrane-embedded subunit that forms the ubiquinol binding pockets called Qo and Qi.
A number of quinol antagonists are known that inhibit
bc1 complex activity. These are either specific for the Q
i site, such as antimycin, or for the Q
o site, such as myxothiazol, stigmatellin, and the strobilurins. A range of Q
o inhibitor compounds (Q
oIs) have been developed as antimicrobial agents and are now widely used in agriculture to control fungal and oomycete plant pathogens. Unfortunately, acquired resistance has rapidly emerged in field populations of the plant pathogens. The cytochrome
b mutation G143A plays a central role in the mechanism of resistance. The mutation has been reported in most Q
oI-resistant pathogens (see
http://www.frac.info/frac/index.htm and references within). G143A causes a high level of resistance (>100×) in pathogens, which are consequently controlled poorly or not at all by Q
oIs. In the model organism
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, G143A also dramatically increases resistance to myxothiazol (18,000×) and azoxystrobin (4,000×) (
8). G143 is a highly conserved residue located in the Q
o pocket, close to the inhibitor binding site. The replacement of glycine with alanine would prevent inhibitor binding through simple steric hindrance while the Q
o site remains functional, as observed in the yeast model (
8).
The cytochrome
b gene is encoded by the mitochondrial genome in all eukaryotes. In fungi, large introns are usually found in the gene. Analysis of its genomic structure in several fungal plant pathogens revealed variations in the arrangement of exons and introns between species (
13), as had been observed in earlier studies, for instance, in reference
4. Of particular interest is the intron present in some species and located immediately after the codon for G143. That intron is similar to intron bi2 found in the cytochrome
b gene of most
S.
cerevisiae laboratory strains. In several species of
Puccinia, in
Alternaria solani, and in other fungi, intron bi2 is present. Interestingly, in those species, the resistance mutation G143A has not been detected so far. In contrast, species where G143A has been reported do not contain intron bi2 (
13,
24), for instance,
Blumeria graminis,
Mycosphaerella fijiensis,
M.
graminicola,
Venturia inaequalis,
Plasmopara viticola,
Alternaria alternata, etc.
Botrytis cinerea is particularly interesting, since the same species presents two types of cytochrome
b gene; some field isolates contain intron bi2, while others do not. The mutation G143A has been reported only in the latter populations (
1,
17). These observations suggested that the presence or absence of intron bi2 might affect the occurrence of the G143A mutation. It has been hypothesized that the resistance mutation might impair the correct splicing of intron bi2, leading to a reduced level of mature cytochrome
b mRNA and a smaller amount of the
bc1 complex and to decreased respiratory function (
13). Therefore, G143A, affecting the fitness of the resistant cells, would be counterselected in the field. The mutation would not evolve in pathogens containing bi2, except if compensation mechanisms can be developed that restore respiratory efficiency while keeping the resistance mutation.
In this study, we used S. cerevisiae as a model organism to analyze the effect of the G143A mutation in an intron containing cytochrome b and to investigate possible ways to bypass the defect caused by the mutation.