Vertical and horizontal gene transfer shaped plant colonization and biomass degradation in the fungal genus Armillaria

Archive ouverte

Sahu, Neha | Indic, Boris | Wong-Bajracharya, Johanna | Merényi, Zsolt | Ke, Huei-Mien | Ahrendt, Steven | Monk, Tori-Lee | Kocsubé, Sándor | Drula, Elodie | Lipzen, Anna | Bálint, Balázs | Henrissat, Bernard | Andreopoulos, Bill | Martin, Francis | Bugge Harder, Christoffer | Rigling, Daniel | Ford, Kathryn | Foster, Gary | Pangilinan, Jasmyn | Papanicolaou, Alexie | Barry, Kerrie | Labutti, Kurt | Virágh, Máté | Koriabine, Maxim | Yan, Mi | Riley, Robert | Champramary, Simang | Plett, Krista | Grigoriev, Igor | Tsai, Isheng Jason | Slot, Jason | Sipos, György | Plett, Jonathan | Nagy, László

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. The fungal genus Armillaria contains necrotrophic pathogens and some of the largest terrestrial organisms that cause tremendous losses in diverse ecosystems, yet how they evolved pathogenicity in a clade of dominantly non-pathogenic wood degraders remains elusive. Here we show that Armillaria species, in addition to gene duplications and de novo gene origins, acquired at least 1,025 genes via 124 horizontal gene transfer events, primarily from Ascomycota. Horizontal gene transfer might have affected plant biomass degrading and virulence abilities of Armillaria, and provides an explanation for their unusual, soft rot-like wood decay strategy. Combined multi-species expression data revealed extensive regulation of horizontally acquired and wood-decay related genes, putative virulence factors and two novel conserved pathogenicity-induced small secreted proteins, which induced necrosis in planta. Overall, this study details how evolution knitted together horizontally and vertically inherited genes in complex adaptive traits of plant biomass degradation and pathogenicity in important fungal pathogens.The fungal genus Armillaria includes virulent necrotrophic pathogens, unusual wood decayers and the largest terrestrial organisms on Earth. Sahu et al. suggest that horizontal gene transfer contributed to the evolution of some of these unique traits.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Gene family expansions and transcriptome signatures uncover fungal adaptations to wood decay

Archive ouverte | Hage, Hayat | CCSD

International audience. Because they comprise some of the most efficient wood-decayers, Polyporales fungi impact carbon cycling in forest environment. Despite continuous discoveries on the enzymatic machinery involv...

Large-scale genome sequencing of mycorrhizal fungi provides insights into the early evolution of symbiotic traits

Archive ouverte | Miyauchi, Shingo | CCSD

International audience. Mycorrhizal fungi are mutualists that play crucial roles in nutrient acquisition in terrestrial ecosystems. Mycorrhizal symbioses arose repeatedly across multiple lineages of Mucoromycotina, ...

Evolutionary innovations through gain and loss of genes in the ectomycorrhizal Boletales

Archive ouverte | Wu, Gang | CCSD

International audience. - We aimed to identify genomic traits of transitions to ectomycorrhizal ecology within the Boletales by comparing the genomes of 21 symbiotrophic species with their saprotrophic brown-rot rel...

Chargement des enrichissements...