In this communication, we show that the pacC(c)14 mutation drastically reduced the mannose and N-acetylglycosamine content of the pacA-encoded acid phosphatase secreted by the fungus Aspergillus nidulans when grown at 22 degrees C, pH 5.0, compared to a control strain. The staining after PAGE was not observed for the pacA-encoded acid phosphatase, while the palD-encoded Pi-repressible alkaline phosphatase had an altered electrophoretic mobility. In addition, the secreted acid phosphatase also had a reduced number of isoforms visualized by staining after IEF and glycosylation had a protective effect against its heat inactivation. We also show that a full-length version of gene pacC-1 cloned from Neurospora crassa complemented the pacC(c)14 mutation of A. nidulans, including the remediation of both the acid and alkaline Pi-repressible phosphatases secreted at pH 5.0, which indicates that glycosylation of secreted phosphatases is mediated in A. nidulans by the conserved PacC pathway that governs pH-responsive gene expression.