Comparative Transcriptome Analysis Explores the Mechanism of Angiosperm and Gymnosperm Deadwood Degradation by Fomes fomentarius .
Yu-Lian WeiJianbin XueJiangtao ShiTong LiHai-Sheng YuanPublished in: Journal of fungi (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
In forest ecosystems, most of the soil organic matter is derived from trees, as deadwood lignocellulose and wood-decaying basidiomycetes are the most important decomposers of lignin and cellulose. Fomes fomentarius is one of the most common white-rot fungi colonizing angiosperm trees and is often found in birch deadwood but seldom in pine deadwood. To reveal the mechanism through which F. fomentarius selects angiosperms as its preferred host trees, birch and pinewood sticks were selected for culturing for two months. The weight loss, cellulose and lignin degradation rates, activities of degrading enzymes, and transcriptome analyses of two degradation models were compared and analyzed. The results showed that F. fomentarius -degraded birchwood with higher efficiency than pinewood. A GO enrichment analysis found that more upregulated genes related to the top 30 terms showed a molecular function related to degradation, and most genes belonged to the CAZymes family in F. fomentarius -degraded birchwood. However, pinewood degradation did not show these phenomena. A KEGG pathway analysis also indicated that, for the same pathway, more upregulated genes were involved in birchwood degradation caused by F. fomentarius than in pinewood degradation.