4 research outputs found

    The Genomes of the Fungal Plant Pathogens Cladosporium fulvum and Dothistroma septosporum Reveal Adaptation to Different Hosts and Lifestyles But Also Signatures of Common Ancestry

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    We sequenced and compared the genomes of the Dothideomycete fungal plant pathogens Cladosporium fulvum (Cfu) (syn. Passalora fulva) and Dothistroma septosporum (Dse) that are closely related phylogenetically, but have different lifestyles and hosts. Although both fungi grow extracellularly in close contact with host mesophyll cells, Cfu is a biotroph infecting tomato, while Dse is a hemibiotroph infecting pine. The genomes of these fungi have a similar set of genes (70% of gene content in both genomes are homologs), but differ significantly in size (Cfu >61.1-Mb; Dse 31.2-Mb), which is mainly due to the difference in repeat content (47.2% in Cfu versus 3.2% in Dse). Recent adaptation to different lifestyles and hosts is suggested by diverged sets of genes. Cfu contains an a-tomatinase gene that we predict might be required for detoxification of tomatine, while this gene is absent in Dse. Many genes encoding secreted proteins are unique to each species and the repeat-rich areas in Cfu are enriched for these species-specific genes. In contrast, conserved genes suggest common host ancestry. Homologs of Cfu effector genes, including Ecp2 and Avr4, are present in Dse and induce a Cf-Ecp2- and Cf-4-mediated hypersensitive response, respectively. Strikingly, genes involved in production of the toxin dothistromin, a likely virulence factor for Dse, are conserved in Cfu, but their expression differs markedly with essentially no expression by Cfu in planta. Likewise, Cfu has a carbohydrate-degrading enzyme catalog that is more similar to that of necrotrophs or hemibiotrophs and a larger pectinolytic gene arsenal than Dse, but many of these genes are not expressed in planta or are pseudogenized. Overall, comparison of their genomes suggests that these closely related plant pathogens had a common ancestral host but since adapted to different hosts and lifestyles by a combination of differentiated gene content, pseudogenization, and gene regulatio

    Pseudogenization in pathogenic fungi with different host plants and lifestyles might reflect their evolutionary past

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    Pseudogenes are genes with significant homology to functional genes but contain disruptive mutations (DMs) leading to production of non- or partially functional proteins. Little is known about pseudogenization in pathogenic fungi with different lifestyles. Here we report on identification of DMs causing pseudogenes in the genomes of the fungal plant pathogens Botrytis cinerea, Cladosporium fulvum, Dothistroma septosporum, Mycosphaerella fijiensis, Verticillium dahliae and Zymoseptoria tritici. In these fungi we have identified 1740 gene models containing 2795 DMs obtained by an alignment-based gene prediction method. The contribution of sequencing errors to DMs was minimized by analyses of resequenced genomes to obtain a refined data set of 924 gene models containing 1666 true DMs. The frequency of pseudogenes varied from 1 to 5% in the gene catalogues of these fungi, being the highest in the asexually reproducing fungi C. fulvum (4.9%), followed by D. septosporum (2.4%) and V. dahliae (2.1%). The majority of pseudogenes does not represent recent gene duplications, but members of multi-gene families and unitary genes. In general there was no bias for pseudogenization of specific genes in the six fungi. Single exceptions are those encoding secreted proteins including proteases which appeared more frequently pseudogenized in C. fulvum than in D. septosporum. Most pseudogenes present in these two phylogenically closely related fungi are not shared suggesting that they are related to adaptation to a different host (tomato versus pine) and lifestyle (biotroph versus hemi-biotroph

    Pseudogenization in pathogenic fungi with different host plants and lifestyles might reflect their evolutionary past

    No full text
    Pseudogenes are genes with significant homology to functional genes but contain disruptive mutations (DMs) leading to production of non- or partially functional proteins. Little is known about pseudogenization in pathogenic fungi with different lifestyles. Here we report on identification of DMs causing pseudogenes in the genomes of the fungal plant pathogens Botrytis cinerea, Cladosporium fulvum, Dothistroma septosporum, Mycosphaerella fijiensis, Verticillium dahliae and Zymoseptoria tritici. In these fungi we have identified 1740 gene models containing 2795 DMs obtained by an alignment-based gene prediction method. The contribution of sequencing errors to DMs was minimized by analyses of resequenced genomes to obtain a refined data set of 924 gene models containing 1666 true DMs. The frequency of pseudogenes varied from 1 to 5% in the gene catalogues of these fungi, being the highest in the asexually reproducing fungi C. fulvum (4.9%), followed by D. septosporum (2.4%) and V. dahliae (2.1%). The majority of pseudogenes does not represent recent gene duplications, but members of multi-gene families and unitary genes. In general there was no bias for pseudogenization of specific genes in the six fungi. Single exceptions are those encoding secreted proteins including proteases which appeared more frequently pseudogenized in C. fulvum than in D. septosporum. Most pseudogenes present in these two phylogenically closely related fungi are not shared suggesting that they are related to adaptation to a different host (tomato versus pine) and lifestyle (biotroph versus hemi-biotroph
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