Introduction

Clonostachys rosea, a member of the order Hypocreales in the class Sordariomycetes, has a complex life style as a necrotrophic mycoparasite by killing other fungi and feeding on dead mycelia1. C. rosea is a promising biocontrol agent against numerous plant pathogenic fungi, including Sclerotinia sclerotiorum, Rhizoctonia solani, Fusarium spp. and Botrytis cinerea, and has achieved good results in greenhouse and field trials1,2. Multiple mechanisms, mycoparasitism, antagonism, competition, induced plant resistance, and secretion of cell wall-degrading enzymes are all involved in the biocontrol properties of the fungus3,4,5. In recent years, the functional genes of C. rosea have attracted much attention, and a number of genes, such as nonribosomal peptide synthetase gene nps4, transcription factor-encoding gene crtf, and cell wall biogenesis protein phosphatase gene CrSsd1 were identified to be involved in fungal growth, conidiation, mycoparasitic ability, and biocontrol activity6,7,8. In the previous study, we sequenced and analysed the transcriptome of the highly efficient C. chloroleuca strain 67-1 (formerly C. rosea 67-1) mycoparasitising the sclerotia of S. sclerotiorum9, from which we identified the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)-encoding gene Crmapk that is orthologous to a Fus3/Kss1 pathway member in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Crmapk deficiency led to a reduced mycoparasitic ability to sclerotia and much lower biocontrol efficacy against soybean sclerotinia stem rot, indicating that Crmapk plays important roles in the biocontrol process of C. chloroleuca10. However, the molecular mechanism by which Crmapk regulates the mycoparasitism of C. chloroleuca remains unclear.

In eukaryotic organisms, transmitting signals into cells is a very complex process. When cells perceive external stimuli, a series of signal transduction pathways are initiated, and sequential cellular responses are triggered11,12. MAPK pathways comprising a MAPK kinase kinase (MAPKKK), a MAPK kinase (MAPKK), and a MAPK13 are important molecular systems that are directly connected with signal transduction and responses to diverse stresses, such as pheromones, osmotic pressure and growth factors14,15,16. In response to a stimulus, MAPKKKs phosphorylate and activate downstream MAPKKs, which in turn phosphorylate and activate MAPKs, and these enzymes phosphorylate specific downstream substrates, initiating cellular responses17. In S. cerevisiae, five MAPK pathways that regulate the biological processes of mating (Fus3/Kss1), filamentous growth (Kss1), cell wall integrity (Slt2), responses to high osmotic stress (Hog1) and ascospore formation (Smk1)18,19 have been identified. The functions of MAPK-encoding genes have been studied in different species, including some biocontrol fungi in the last decade. Gruber and Zeilinger14 found that deletion of MAPK-encoding gene Tmk1 in Trichoderma atroviride altered the radial growth and conidiation of the fungus, inhibited the formation of infection structures, and reduced mycoparasitic ability to R. solani and B. cinerea hyphae. In Coniothyrium minitans, disruption of MAPK gene CmSlt2 resulted in a lack of conidiation and a marked reduction of mycoparasitic ability to the sclerotia of S. sclerotiorum20. However, MAPKs may also act as negative modulators in response to stimuli and/or stresses. Mendoza-Mendoza et al.21 reported that deficiency of MAPK gene Tvk1 induced the expression of mycoparasitism-related genes in T. virens in response to R. solani. In addition, the mutants exhibited enhanced biocontrol efficacy compared with the wild type strain and chemical fungicide.

During signal transmission, a series of proteins are activated responding to host and environmental stimulation. In plant pathogenic fungi, MAPKs interact with various kinds of proteins, such as transcription factor Ste12, MAPK phosphatase Msg5, and heat shock factor Sfl122,23,24. However, there are no reports on proteins interacting with MAPK in biocontrol fungi, and the mechanism underlying MAPK-mediated regulation of mycoparasitism has not yet been clarified in mycoparasites.

Protein–protein interaction networks run through all biological and metabolic processes in living organisms. By using yeast two hybrid (Y2H) system, considerable interacting proteins and domains have been identified in plants, animals and fungi19,25,26. Y2H technique was firstly developed in S. cerevisiae by exploiting the transcription factor GAL4 containing a separable DNA binding domain (BD) and a transcriptional activation domain (AD)25. Once prey proteins (library) fused to the DNA-AD domain interact with a bait protein (target) fused to the DNA-BD domain, GAL4 promoters are activated and nutritional or antibiotic selectable markers are expressed as reporter genes, revealing putative interacting proteins27. Although some other methods such as coimmunoprecipitation and bimolecular fluorescence complementation are also employed28, high-throughput screening of Y2H libraries remains the most cost-effective and practical approach for protein–protein interaction studies in vivo.

To explore Crmapk-interacting proteins in C. chloroleuca, a high-quality Y2H library was generated using an in vivo recombination strategy, and 60 candidate interacting proteins involved in multiple biological processes were identified. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of proteins interacting with MAPK in C. chloroleuca and other hyperparasites identified by constructing a Y2H library. The findings provide valuable clues to the mechanisms by which Crmapk regulates mycoparasitism of C. chloroleuca.

Results

Quality of Y2H library of C. chloroleuca 67-1

The mycelia of 67-1 strain under the induction of S. sclerotiorum sclerotia were collected for RNA extraction and construction of Y2H library. The quality of the Y2H library was evaluated, revealing 1.6 × 107 primary clones (Fig. 1a), much higher than the generally required capacity of 1.0 × 106 CFU/mL. The recombination rate of the library was 96% (Fig. 1b), and 24 randomly selected colonies were found to have an average insert size of ~ 1 kb (Fig. 1c), indicating that the Y2H library was of high quality and could be used for protein–protein interaction analysis.

Figure 1
figure 1

Analysis of the quality of the primary C. chloroleuca 67-1 library. (a) Determination of storage capacity. (b) Determination of recombination rate using primers pGADT7-F/R. (c) Determination of the mean length of inserted fragments from fungal colonies randomly selected by PCR amplification with primers pGADT7-F/R. M DNA 2000 marker, bp base pairs.

Construction of the pGBKT7-Crmapk bait vector and its auto-activation

The domain serine/threonine protein kinase (1068 bp) of the Crmapk gene was amplified from cDNA of C. chloroleuca 67-1 using specific primers Crmapk-F/Crmapk-R (Fig. 2a). The pGBKT7-Crmapk bait plasmid was successfully constructed and verified by PCR amplification using vector primers T7/3′BD and target gene primers Crmapk-F/Crmapk-R, and by DNA sequencing (Fig. 2b).

Figure 2
figure 2

Construction of pGBKT7-Crmapk bait vector in C. chloroleuca 67-1. (a) Domain structure of Crmapk as annotated by SMART (http://smart.embl.de/). (b) Verification of the recombinant pGBKT7-Crmapk bait vector. M, DNA 5000 markers; Lanes 1–2, verification of the pGBKT7-Crmapk bait vector using vector primers T7/3′BD; Lanes 3–4, verification of the bait vector using target gene primers Crmapk-F/Crmapk-R. (c) Self-activation tests of the pGBKT7-Crmapk bait vector. The bait and empty vector pGADT7 were transformed into the Y2H Gold strain and cultured on SD/-Trp/X medium. pGBKT7-p53 and pGADT7-T were used together as a positive control, while pGBKT7-Lam and pGADT7-T served as a negative control.

The availability of the pGBKT7-Crmapk bait vector was determined, and colonies containing the bait plasmid were white in colour on SD/-Trp/X (synthetic dropout medium lacking tryptophan and supplemented with 40 µg/mL X-α-gal) plates, while colonies containing the pGADT7-T and pGBKT7-53 positive control plasmids were blue, indicating that the pGBKT7-Crmapk bait could not autonomously activate the reporter genes (Fig. 2c). In addition, from visual analysis, fungal colonies containing bait and control plasmids had apparently the same sizes, suggesting that the constructed vector was not toxic to yeast cells. Thus, the pGBKT7-Crmapk bait vector could be used to screen the protein library for interacting proteins.

Screening of Crmapk-interacting proteins

After co-transformation of pGBKT7-Crmapk and prey plasmids, a total of 288 blue clones grew on SD/-Leu/-Trp/X-α-Gal/AbA (DDO/X/A) plates (Fig. 3a), among which 149 remained blue on high-stringency SD/-Ade/-His/-Leu/-Trp/X-α-Gal/AbA (QDO/X/A) plates (Fig. 3b), indicating that these clones might be genuine positives. All prey plasmids were verified by PCR amplification using vector primers pGADT7-F/R. These positive clones were separately co-transformed with pGBKT7-Crmapk, and finally, 80 blue clones emerged on QDO/X/A plates were obtained, which might express potential Crmapk-interacting proteins (Fig. 3c).

Figure 3
figure 3

Screening and identification of putative interacting proteins in C. chloroleuca 67-1 via Y2H. (a) Positive clones screened on DDO/X/A plates. (b) Positive clones screened on QDO/X/A plates. “+” represents the positive control; “−” represents the negative control. (c) Interaction validation for individual hits. pGBKT7-53 and pGADT7-T plasmids were co-transformed into Y2H Gold cells as a positive control, while the pGBKT7-Lam and pGADT7-T served as a negative control. Three replicates were carried out for each treatment, and three plates were presented in the results.

Bioinformatic analysis of Crmapk-interacting proteins

The sequences of interacting proteins were aligned with the C. chloroleuca 67-1 genome database29, and 60 proteins interacting with Crmapk were identified (Supplementary Table S1). Among them, five genes presented higher interaction frequency than others, namely NODE_505_4, NODE_320_3, NODE_606_27, NODE_522_14 and NODE_689_14, encoding a mitochondrial distribution and morphology protein, a putative C2H2 zinc finger domain-containing protein, a phospho-2-dehydro-3-deoxyheptonate aldolase, a CCR4-NOT transcriptional complex subunit, and a glucose-6-phosphate 1-dehydrogenase, among which the interaction frequencies of NODE_505_4 and NODE_320_3 were 8 and 7, respectively. Additionally, several interacting proteins were vital components of signal transduction pathways, such as COP9 signalosome complex subunit 5 (NODE_52_12), ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2 (NODE_405_44), transport proteins SEC23 and SEC31 (NODE_374_8 and NODE_558_28), and translocation protein SEC66 (NODE_29_18), indicating that these proteins might be involved in the similar pathways with Crmapk. SMART and Pfam database analyses showed that the domains of the 60 interacting proteins were diverse and mainly included translation protein SH3-like domains, protein kinase domains, C2H2 finger domains, peptidase S8/S53 domains, phosphofructokinase domains, and galactose mutarotase-like domains, implying that these domains might be involved in the interactions with Crmapk.

To investigate the categories of MAPK-interacting proteins in C. chloroleuca, the number of identified proteins related to each Gene Ontology (GO) term was calculated according to GO annotation information. The results for biological process classification showed that interacting proteins involved in cellular processes were the biggest group, accounting for 30% of all candidate proteins. The second largest group contained proteins associated with metabolic processes, accounting for 27% of identified proteins (Fig. 4a). In molecular function category, 37% of the candidates had the characters of binding ability, while 30% of proteins with catalytic and transporter activities might also play important roles during mycoparasitic processes in this biocontrol fungus (Fig. 4b). Subcellular localisation of the interacting proteins was also analysed, and they were mainly distributed in the nucleus (46%), cytoplasm (20%) and mitochondria (15%) of fungal cells (Fig. 4c). These results indicate that the putative MAPK-interacting proteins are involved in diverse functions during C. chloroleuca mycoparasitism, especially cellular, metabolism processes, and binding, catalytic activities.

Figure 4
figure 4

Gene Ontology functional classification of Crmapk-interacting proteins in C. chloroleuca 67-1. (a) Classification of interacting proteins based on biological process. (b) Classification of interacting proteins based on molecular function. (c) Subcellular localisation of interacting proteins. Blast2GO and WoLF SPORT Software were used for GO functional classification analysis.

Protein–protein interaction verified by GST pull-down assay

To further confirm the accuracy of the interactions identified by Y2H, six randomly selected putative interacting proteins NODE_320_3, NODE_439_51, NODE_505_4, NODE_1511_11, NODE_405_44 and NODE_606_27 that encoded a C2H2 zinc finger protein, an S8/S53 peptidase, a mitochondrial distribution and morphology protein, a NADH kinase pos5, a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2, and a phospho-2-dehydro-3-deoxyheptonate aldolase, respectively, were assayed by the glutathione S-transferase (GST) pull-down method in vitro. The results showed that all the proteins could be eluted and were confirmed to interact with Crmapk (Fig. S1), indicating the Y2H results are reliable.

Expression of Crmapk-interacting genes in C. chloroleuca 67-1 under the induction of sclerotia

To investigate mycoparasitism-related genes in C. chloroleuca, the transcriptome of the strain 67-1 associated with S. sclerotiorum sclerotia was sequenced and the differentially expressed genes 8 h, 24 h and 48 h after sclerotia induction were analysed9. Combining with these results, we found that 38 interacting genes were differentially expressed (|Log2 FC| ≥ 1 and p ≤ 0.05; Table 1), among which 15 genes (NODE_15_2, NODE_171_30, NODE_176_9, NODE_198_20, NODE_2_38, NODE_201_16, NODE_374_8, NODE_38_86, NODE_486_20, NODE_507_12, NODE_52_12, NODE_525_9, NODE_558_28, NODE_606_27 and NODE_98_38) were upregulated by at least 1.2-fold at 8 h, similar to expression of Crmapk that especially highly expressed at 8 h during the mycoparasitic process of C. chloroleuca 67-110. To explore the roles and mechanisms of Crmapk in C. chloroleuca mycoparasitism, the gene was deleted using gene homologous recombination strategy, and the transcriptome analysis of ΔCrmapk mutant mycoparasitising S. sclerotiorum sclerotia was performed before10. In this study, it showed that when Crmapk was deficient 11 putative interacting genes from the Y2H library were differentially expressed (|Log2 FC| ≥ 1 and p ≤ 0.05) based on the transcriptome profile of the C. chloroleuca mutant mycoparasitising sclerotia (Table 2), indicating that these genes might be involved in similar pathways to Crmapk. Among them, eight interacting genes were found to be differentially expressed in the wild type strain during parasitising sclerotia, including NODE_320_3, NODE_439_51, NODE_29_18 and NODE_17_25 encoding a C2H2 zinc finger protein, an S8/S53 peptidase, translocation protein SEC66, and N-acetyl-beta-d-glucosaminidase (NAGase), suggesting that they might account for the decreased mycoparasitic ability of C. chloroleuca 67-1. From above results, we speculate that all the differentially expressed genes maybe the targets of the Fus3/Kss1-MAPK pathway.

Table 1 Genes interacting with Crmapk that are differentially expressed in the transcriptome of C. chloroleuca 67-1 parasitising S. sclerotiorum.
Table 2 Genes interacting with Crmapk that are differentially expressed in the transcriptome of the ΔCrmapk mutant parasitising S. sclerotiorum.

In order to verify whether the transcriptome profiles were reliable for screening Crmapk-interacting proteins in C. chloroleuca, the relative expressions of nine differently expressed genes during mycoparasitising were analysed by using quantitative reverse transcription PCR (qRT-PCR), and the detailed information was shown in Supplementary Table S1. The results confirmed that these Crmapk-interacting genes encoding acetyl-CoA carboxylase, DNA polymerase eta subunit, trihydroxynaphthalene reductase, transport protein SEC23, aflatoxin B1 aldehyde reductase, glucoamylase, COP9 signalosome complex subunit 5, asparagine synthetase domain-containing protein, and phospho-2-dehydro-3-deoxyheptonate aldolase were consistent with the transcriptome data of C. chloroleuca 67-1 (Fig. 5). This suggests that the transcriptome profiles are reliable, and suitable for screening Crmapk-interacting proteins and probing the mechanisms by which Crmapk regulates mycoparasitism of C. chloroleuca.

Figure 5
figure 5

Expression levels of nine Crmapk-interacting genes in C. chloroleuca 67-1 under mycoparasitic conditions. The mycelia of 67-1 strain under the induction of sclerotia were collected at 8, 24 and 48 h. The letter “a” represents the controls (samples without sclerotia) and “b” represents the treatments induced by S. sclerotiorum sclerotia. Error bars indicate the standard deviation of three replicates. Statistical tests were carried out using Tukey’s test for multiple comparisons. Asterisks indicate statistically significant difference (p < 0.05).

Discussion

MAPK signal transduction pathways are highly conserved in eukaryotic cells, and can modulate multiple cellular processes including embryogenesis, proliferation, differentiation, virulence and hyphal chemotropism through signal transduction from the surface of cells stimulated by extracellular factors30. In a previous study, it was confirmed that Crmapk played an important role in mycoparasitism of C. chloroleuca10. Crmapk is a protein kinase that acts as the central regulator of signal transduction pathways in C. chloroleuca, but its regulatory mechanisms are unknown. Proteins often work together with other protein partners to accomplish their essential functions in living organisms31. Therefore, characterisation of proteins interacting with Crmapk may provide information for understanding the molecular mechanisms by which Crmapk regulates mycoparasitism of C. chloroleuca. In previous studies, several MAPK-interacting proteins have been identified, including transcription factors Mst12 and Mcm1, and dual-specificity protein kinase Msg5 in pathogenic fungi18,32,33. In the present study, we constructed a high-quality Y2H library using the hyphae of C. chloroleuca induced by the sclerotia of S. sclerotiorum, from which proteins potentially interacting with Crmapk were screened and identified. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of identification of proteins interacting with MAPK in mycoparasites.

The Y2H system is widely used for the discovery of protein–protein interactions. This approach not only identifies putative interactions between two functional proteins, but also has great potential for high-throughput screening of uncharacterised proteins that bind to a given bait protein in large pooled cDNA libraries26,34. In the current study, we harvested mycelia from C. chloroleuca associating with S. sclerotiorum sclerotia rather than collecting samples from culture media, and thereby constructed a mycoparasitism-related cDNA library. Undoubtedly, a high-quality cDNA library is of great importance for obtaining reliable interaction data in Y2H analyses. In this study, the library capacity, recombination rate and size of inserted fragments that are important to the quality of cDNA libraries35,36,37 fulfilled the requirements and ensured the specificity and accuracy of the positive interactions. Although in some cases, Y2H analyses may generate a number of false-positives34, the proteins identified herein are highly likely to be related to the mechanism by which Crmapk regulates mycoparasitism of C. chloroleuca.

In many biological processes in eukaryotic organisms, MAPKs interact with other proteins to facilitate signal transmission. In the present study, 60 proteins putatively interacting with Crmapk were identified, most of which are new and perform diverse functions in filamentous fungi. Many of these proteins are related to signalosome complex, transcription factors and translocators, which involved in gene regulation, metabolism and signal transduction processes. Among them, C2H2-type zinc finger protein NODE_320_3 displayed high screening frequency. The C2H2 zinc finger family is a large group of transcription factors that play important roles in a variety of cellular functions, including gene expression, cell growth, proliferation, apoptosis and intracellular signal transduction38. Proteins may act as positive or negative regulators in MAPK signalling pathways to mediate cellular functions39,40,41. From the transcriptome of strain 67-1 under the induction of sclerotia, we found that NODE_320_3 was differentially expressed, suggesting that it may contribute to the mycoparasitic ability of C. chloroleuca.

NODE_52_12 functions as a COP9 signalosome (CSN) complex. The CSN/COP9 signalosome has been shown to act in many pathways, mainly via ubiquitin degradation and signal transduction pathways42,43. Brockway et al.44 demonstrated that deficiency of the csn gene resulted in an inability to activate the MAPK pathway, which interrupted proliferation of Caenorhabditis elegans. In the present study, the CSN gene was also found to be markedly upregulated during the mycoparasitic process of C. chloroleuca 67-19, indicating that the COP9 signalosome may play an important role in C. chloroleuca biocontrol activities.

Interacting proteins are more likely to be involved in similar biological processes and functions, and may be co-expressed in some circumstances36. In the transcriptome of C. chloroleuca 67-1 during the mycoparasitic process, Crmapk was especially highly expressed at 8 h, indicating its involvement in initiating C. chloroleuca mycoparasitism10. Combined with transcriptome analyses, the results showed that 15 interacting genes were upregulated during the early stages of the mycoparasitic process, consistent with the Crmapk expression profile. We speculate that these genes are likely to be closely connected with Crmapk, and involved in signal transduction following pathogen stimulation.

Peptidases of the S8/S53 family can degrade a broad range of substrates, including plant nematodes, and one such protein has been linked to the molecular mechanism of C. rosea infection of nematodes45. Pozo et al.46 found that overexpression of the serine protease encoding gene tvsp1 in T. virens significantly increased its ability to protect cotton seedings against R. solani, and the gene was involved in the biocontrol process of the fungus. More interestingly, the S8/S53 protease gene family is in fact evolving under selection for increased gene copy number in C. rosea, which highlights its importance for mycoparasitism47. Herein, we found that peptidase S8/S53 gene NODE_439_51 was differentially expressed in both wild-type and ΔCrmapk mutant strains during parasitism on S. sclerotiorum, implying that this peptidase might be involved in C. chloroleuca infection of pathogenic fungi.

Chitinolytic enzymes which are essential for catabolism of chitin primarily include chitinase, NAGase, and lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase48. Among them, NAGase that belongs to GH family 20 is capable of hydrolysing the terminal N-acetylglucosamine residues and exhibits a variety of biological activities49. The previous study of T. harzianum proved that the expression of the NAGase gene could be activated by three kinds of chitin-rich residues, chitosan, shrimp shell powder and mushroom wastes, sequentially enhanced the chitinolytic activity, which facilitated the biocontrol efficacy of T. harzianum against F. oxysporum in greenhouse50. In the present study, we found that NAGase gene NODE_17_25 was differentially expressed both in the wild-type and ΔCrmapk mutant strains parasitising S. sclerotiorum, providing us a new insight into the biocontrol mechanism of C. chloroleuca.

Another interesting gene is NODE_29_18 that encodes a translocation protein. Translocation proteins play auxiliary roles in recognition of precursors, and are closely related to signal transduction pathways51. In the present study, we found that this gene was differentially expressed in both isolates, indicating that the translocation protein may be closely related to MAPK pathways and involved in the mycoparasitic process of C. chloroleuca.

Based on the above findings, a regulatory network of C. chloroleuca mycoparasitism could be constructed from Crmapk and its interacting proteins. We speculate that once encountering a fungal host, Crmapk is highly expressed in C. chloroleuca, and simultaneously stimulates a series of related pathways to complete signal transduction and initiate the mycoparasitic process.

In conclusion, we identified putative MAPK-interacting proteins in C. chloroleuca, and the results may be applicable to other mycoparasites. The findings provide vital clues regarding molecular mechanisms by which Crmapk regulates mycoparasitism of C. chloroleuca, improve our knowledge of the mechanisms underlying biocontrol of C. chloroleuca, and help to the development of highly efficient biocontrol agents.

Materials and methods

Fungal strains and plasmids

C. chloroleuca 67-1 (ACCC 39160) was originally isolated from a vegetable yard in Hainan Province, China, using the sclerotia-baiting method52. S. sclerotiorum Ss-H (ACCC 39161) was separated from sclerotia-infected soybean stems in a field in Heilongjiang Province, China. Both strains were regularly cultured on potato dextrose agar (PDA) medium at 26 °C and maintained at 4 °C in the Biocontrol of Soilborne Diseases Lab of the Institute of Plant Protection, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences.

Construction of the Y2H library of C. chloroleuca 67-1

Strain 67-1 was incubated on PDA at 26 °C for 10 days, spores were washed with sterile water and adjusted to 1 × 107 spores/mL, and spore suspensions were smeared evenly on a PDA plate and covered with cellophane. Uniformly sized sclerotia were placed onto the surface of strain 67-1 plates evenly after culturing for 48 h, and the mycelia of C. chloroleuca 67-1 during mycoparasitic process and vegetative growth were collected, respectively, at 24 h and placed immediately in liquid nitrogen. Each treatment included five replicates.

Total RNA was harvested using TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen, California, USA), then treated with DNase I (TransGen, Beijing, China) to eliminate contaminated genomic DNA. The purity and integrity of total RNA were determined using a NanoDrop 1000 instrument (Thermo, Waltham, USA) and agarose gel electrophoresis, respectively. The isolation and purification of poly(A) mRNA from total RNA were carried out using an Oligotex mRNA Midi Kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The cDNA library was acquired using a CloneMiner II cDNA Library Construction Kit (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer’s protocols.

Following normalisation and short fragment removal, the purified cDNA and linearised pGADT7-DEST vector (prey plasmid), including three different reading frames to confirm the correct expression of all proteins, were co-transformed into the Y187 yeast strain using Yeastmaker Yeast Transformation System 2 (Clonetech, Shiga, Japan). After culturing on synthetic defined medium lacking leucine (SD/-Leu) to select transformants, a series of dilutions of the transformed mixture were also spread on SD/Leu plates to calculate the transformation efficiency and isolate separate colonies. After culturing at 30 °C for 3–6 days, positive transformants were harvested to form an Y2H library. A hemacytometer (Thermo, Waltham, USA) was used to measure the cell density of the Y2H library to ensure that the library capacity was no less than 1.0 × 106 CFU, which is essential for a high-quality Y2H library. To check insert sizes and the recombination rate of the Y2H library, 24 colonies were randomly picked out and amplified by PCR using primers pGADT7-F/R (Table 3). The primary library was retransformed into competent Escherichia coli DH10B, and the plasmids were harvested and stored at − 80 °C.

Table 3 Primers used in this study.

Construction of the pGBKT7-Crmapk bait vector

To screen interacting proteins from the C. chloroleuca Y2H library, the pGBKT7-Crmapk bait vector was constructed. Using C. chloroleuca cDNA as a template, the full-length coding sequence (CDS) of Crmapk (GenBank accession number: KY701731) was amplified with specific primers Crmapk-F and Crmapk-R (Table 3), containing restriction sites BamHI and EcoRI. The resulting PCR product was purified and inserted into bait vector pGBKT7 harbouring the GAL4 DNA-binding domain (BD). The recombinant pGBKT7-Crmapk bait plasmid was verified by double restriction enzyme digestion and DNA sequencing (TSINGKE, Beijing, China).

Auto-activation tests of the pGBKT7-Crmapk bait vector

Bait vector pGBKT7-Crmapk and empty vector pGADT7 were separately transformed into the Y2H Gold strain using the PEG/LiAc-mediated method. The vectors pGBKT7-p53 and pGADT7-T co-transformed were used as positive control, while pGBKT7-Lam and pGADT7-T were used as negative control. Transformants were grown on SD/-Trp (SD medium lacking tryptophan), SD/-Trp/X and SD/-Trp/X/A (SD-Trp supplemented with 40 µg/mL X-α-gal and 200 ng/mL aureobasidin A) plates at 30 °C for 3–5 days. Following the growth of white colonies on SD/-Trp and SD/-Trp/X plates, and no colony growth on SD/-Trp/X/A plates, the bait was verified without auto-activation. In addition, if the bait was toxic, the colonies containing the bait plasmid were obviously smaller than the control treatments. Only the bait vectors that showed no auto-activation activity or toxicity were used for Y2H screening.

Screening of Crmapk-interacting proteins

In order to screen proteins interacted with Crmapk, bait vector pGBKT7-Crmapk and the Y2H AD library were co-transformed into the Y2H Gold strain using the yeast mating method. The mating culture was plated on DDO/X/A agar plates at 30 °C for 3–5 days, and all blue colonies on DDO/X/A agar plates were patched onto higher stringency QDO/X/A agar plates. To further verify the interactions, the prey plasmids of each primary interacting protein were rescued from yeast strains and separately co-transformed with pGBKT7-Crmapk into the Y2H Gold yeast cells. The transformants were then retested on DDO/X/A and QDO/X/A media at 30 °C for 3–5 days, after which resulting blue colonies were considered to be potential positive clones. At the same time, the pGBKT7-53 and pGADT7-T plasmids were co-transformed into Y2H Gold cells as a positive control, while the pGBKT7-Lam and pGADT7-T served as a negative control. Three replicates were carried out, and all positive clones were identified by DNA sequencing using primers pGADT7-F/R for the T7 promoter.

GST pull-down assay

The DNA fragment of Crmapk was cloned into the vector pGEX-4T-1 (GE Healthcare, Chicago, United States) to generate the Crmapk-GST fusion protein. Six interacting proteins NODE_320_3, NODE_439_51, NODE_505_4, NODE_1511_11, NODE_405_44 and NODE_606_27 localising in the nucleus, cytoplasm and mitochondria basing on bioinformatics analyses were selected randomly and corresponding his-labelled proteins were constructed in the pCZN1 (Zoonbio, Nanjing, China) vector separately. GST, Crmapk-GST, NODE_320_3-his, NODE_439_51-his, NODE_505_4-his, NODE_1511_11-his, NODE_405_44-his and NODE_606_27-his plasmids were expressed in the E. coli BL21 cells (Sangon, Shanghai, China). The cells were lysed in lysis buffer (50 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 50 mM NaCl, 1 mM PMSF) with a sonicator (Scientz, Ningbo, China) and centrifuged at 13,000g, for 10 min. The supernatants were transferred to a 1.5 mL tube and stored at − 70 °C. The GST and Crmapk-GST supernatants were mixed with 30 μL glutathione Sepharose beads (GE Healthcare) and incubated at 4 °C for 2 h, and then the recombinants of Crmapk-GST and GST bound to the Sepharose beads were incubated with the cell lysate of E. coli that contained NODE_320_3-his, NODE_439_51-his, NODE_505_4-his, NODE_1511_11-his, NODE_405_44-his, and NODE_606_27-his at 4 °C. After treated for 4 h, the beads were washed with buffer (50 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 50 mM NaCl, 1 mM PMSF, 1% Triton X-100) five times and the eluted proteins were analysed by immunoblot with monoclonal anti-His and monoclonal anti-GST antibodies.

Bioinformatics analyses of Crmapk-interacting proteins

To identify the corresponding interacting proteins, all sequences obtained from the Y2H assays were analysed using BLAST (https://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov). Homologous proteins were also identified in S. cerevisiae by BLAST. Next, GO analysis (http://amigo.geneontology.org/amigo) was performed to probe gene functional classification basing on biological process, molecular function and subcellular localisation. KEGG pathway analysis (https://www.kegg.jp/) was conducted to investigate high-level functions and pathways from molecular-level information. Protein function and interaction networks of the identified interacting proteins were generated using the UniProt database (http://www.uniprot.org/) and STRING (https://string-db.org/). InterPro (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/) and SMART (http://smart.embl.de/) databases were used to predict protein domains encoded by the prey fragments.

qRT-PCR detection of Crmapk-interacting genes

Nine differentially expressed interacting genes (NODE_115_3, NODE_1331_7, NODE_201_16, NODE_374_8, NODE_38_86, NODE_486_20, NODE_52_12, NODE_525_9, NODE_606_27) were selected randomly and their expression levels during mycoparasitism on S. sclerotiorum sclerotia were determined by qRT-PCR as previously described8. The letter ‘a’ represents the controls (samples without sclerotia) and ‘b’ represents the treatments by S. sclerotiorum sclerotia. The mycelia of C. chloroleuca 67-1 under the induction of sclerotia were collected at 8, 24 and 48 h, and total RNA was extracted using TRIzol reagent following the manufacturer’s instructions. The cDNA was prepared from total RNA using a cDNA FastQuant RT Kit (TIANGEN, Beijing, China), and the expression of Crmapk-interacting genes derived from the Y2H library was investigated using a Bio-Rad IQ 5 Real-Time System (Bio-Rad, California, USA) and SYBR Premix Ex Taq (Takara, Dalian, China). Elongation factor gene EF1 (GenBank accession number: KP274074) was used as an internal reference to normalise gene expression, and the primers used for qRT-PCR determination of the candidates were listed in Table 3. Amplification by qRT-PCR involved heating at 95 °C for 30 s, followed by 40 cycles at 95 °C for 5 s and 55 °C for 30 s. After PCR amplification, fluorescence values were measured every 0.5 °C from 55 to 95 °C, and the relative expression levels of Crmapk-interacting genes were calculated using the 2−∆∆Ct method53. All reactions were performed in triplicate. Statistical software SPSS 2.0 (Chicago, IL, USA) was used for ANOVA. Statistical tests were carried out using Tukey’s test for multiple comparisons and a p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.