Login / Signup

Comparative genomics reveals unique wood-decay strategies and fruiting body development in the Schizophyllaceae.

Éva AlmásiNeha SahuKrisztina KrizsánBalázs BálintGábor M KovácsBrigitta KissJudit CseklyeElodie DrulaBernard HenrissatIstván NagyMansi ChovatiaCatherine AdamKurt LaButtiAnna LipzenRobert RileyIgor V GrigorievLászló G Nagy
Published in: The New phytologist (2019)
Agaricomycetes are fruiting body-forming fungi that produce some of the most efficient enzyme systems to degrade wood. Despite decades-long interest in their biology, the evolution and functional diversity of both wood-decay and fruiting body formation are incompletely known. We performed comparative genomic and transcriptomic analyses of wood-decay and fruiting body development in Auriculariopsis ampla and Schizophyllum commune (Schizophyllaceae), species with secondarily simplified morphologies, an enigmatic wood-decay strategy and weak pathogenicity to woody plants. The plant cell wall-degrading enzyme repertoires of Schizophyllaceae are transitional between those of white rot species and less efficient wood-degraders such as brown rot or mycorrhizal fungi. Rich repertoires of suberinase and tannase genes were found in both species, with tannases restricted to Agaricomycetes that preferentially colonize bark-covered wood, suggesting potential complementation of their weaker wood-decaying abilities and adaptations to wood colonization through the bark. Fruiting body transcriptomes revealed a high rate of divergence in developmental gene expression, but also several genes with conserved expression patterns, including novel transcription factors and small-secreted proteins, some of the latter which might represent fruiting body effectors. Taken together, our analyses highlighted novel aspects of wood-decay and fruiting body development in an important family of mushroom-forming fungi.
Keyphrases
  • cell wall
  • gene expression
  • single cell
  • transcription factor
  • poor prognosis
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • high intensity
  • climate change
  • binding protein
  • candida albicans