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Genomic and metabolomic diversity within a familial population of Aspergillus flavus.

Geromy G MooreBrian M MackKaren L WendtLina Castano-DuqueVictoria M AndersonRobert H Cichewicz
Published in: Molecular microbiology (2024)
Aspergillus flavus is an agriculturally significant micro-fungus having potential to contaminate food and feed crops with toxic secondary metabolites such as aflatoxin (AF) and cyclopiazonic acid (CPA). Research has shown A. flavus strains can overcome heterokaryon incompatibility and undergo meiotic recombination as teleomorphs. Although evidence of recombination in the AF gene cluster has been reported, the impacts of recombination on genotype and metabolomic phenotype in a single generation are lacking. In previous studies, we paired an aflatoxigenic MAT1-1 A. flavus strain with a non-aflatoxigenic MAT1-2 A. flavus strain that had been tagged with green fluorescent protein and then 10 F1 progenies (a mix of fluorescent and non-fluorescent) were randomly selected from single-ascospore colonies and broadly examined for evidence of recombination. In this study, we determined four of those 10 F1 progenies were recombinants because they were not vegetatively compatible with either parent or their siblings, and they exhibited other distinctive traits that could only result from meiotic recombination. The other six progenies examined shared genomic identity with the non-aflatoxigenic, fluorescent, and MAT1-2 parent, but were metabolically distinct. This study highlights phenotypic and genomic changes that may occur in a single generation from the outcrossing of sexually compatible strains of A. flavus.
Keyphrases
  • dna repair
  • dna damage
  • quantum dots
  • living cells
  • copy number
  • escherichia coli
  • atrial fibrillation
  • genome wide
  • risk assessment
  • human health
  • intellectual disability
  • small molecule
  • binding protein
  • single molecule