| Literature DB >> 23785293 |
Rays H Y Jiang1, Irene de Bruijn, Brian J Haas, Rodrigo Belmonte, Lars Löbach, James Christie, Guido van den Ackerveken, Arnaud Bottin, Vincent Bulone, Sara M Díaz-Moreno, Bernard Dumas, Lin Fan, Elodie Gaulin, Francine Govers, Laura J Grenville-Briggs, Neil R Horner, Joshua Z Levin, Marco Mammella, Harold J G Meijer, Paul Morris, Chad Nusbaum, Stan Oome, Andrew J Phillips, David van Rooyen, Elzbieta Rzeszutek, Marcia Saraiva, Chris J Secombes, Michael F Seidl, Berend Snel, Joost H M Stassen, Sean Sykes, Sucheta Tripathy, Herbert van den Berg, Julio C Vega-Arreguin, Stephan Wawra, Sarah K Young, Qiandong Zeng, Javier Dieguez-Uribeondo, Carsten Russ, Brett M Tyler, Pieter van West.
Abstract
Oomycetes in the class Saprolegniomycetidae of the Eukaryotic kingdom Stramenopila have evolved as severe pathogens of amphibians, crustaceans, fish and insects, resulting in major losses in aquaculture and damage to aquatic ecosystems. We have sequenced the 63 Mb genome of the fresh water fish pathogen, Saprolegnia parasitica. Approximately 1/3 of the assembled genome exhibits loss of heterozygosity, indicating an efficient mechanism for revealing new variation. Comparison of S. parasitica with plant pathogenic oomycetes suggests that during evolution the host cellular environment has driven distinct patterns of gene expansion and loss in the genomes of plant and animal pathogens. S. parasitica possesses one of the largest repertoires of proteases (270) among eukaryotes that are deployed in waves at different points during infection as determined from RNA-Seq data. In contrast, despite being capable of living saprotrophically, parasitism has led to loss of inorganic nitrogen and sulfur assimilation pathways, strikingly similar to losses in obligate plant pathogenic oomycetes and fungi. The large gene families that are hallmarks of plant pathogenic oomycetes such as Phytophthora appear to be lacking in S. parasitica, including those encoding RXLR effectors, Crinkler's, and Necrosis Inducing-Like Proteins (NLP). S. parasitica also has a very large kinome of 543 kinases, 10% of which is induced upon infection. Moreover, S. parasitica encodes several genes typical of animals or animal-pathogens and lacking from other oomycetes, including disintegrins and galactose-binding lectins, whose expression and evolutionary origins implicate horizontal gene transfer in the evolution of animal pathogenesis in S. parasitica.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23785293 PMCID: PMC3681718 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Figure 1Taxonomy and ancestral genomic features in S. parasitica.
(A) Animal pathogenic and plant pathogenic oomycetes reside in different taxonomic units. (B) Comparison of intron number in phytopathogenic oomycetes (the average count from the total genes of P. infestans, P. ramorum, P. sojae, Py. ultimum and H. arabidopsidis) and S. parasitica among all genes. (C) Significant difference in intron number in 4008 orthologous genes shared by S. parasitica and Phytophthora species (average intron count of P. infestans, P. sojae and P. ramorum). (Wilcoxon test, p<0.001). (D) Large number of chitinase genes belonging to CAZy family GH-18 in S. parasitica (red) compared to other oomycetes (black; Ps = P. sojae, Pr = P. ramorum, PITG = P. infestans, Hp = H. arabidopsidis, Pyu = Py. ultimum, ALNC = A. laibachii). The phylogenetic tree was constructed with chitinase genes from oomycetes using Maximum likelihood method.
Genome statistics and intron features of oomycetes.
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| Estimated genome size | 63 Mb | 240 Mb | 95 Mb | 65 Mb | 99 Mb | 45 Mb |
| Total contig length | 42.3 Mb | 190 Mb | 78 Mb | 54 Mb | 82 Mb | 45 Mb |
| G+C content | 58% | 51% | 54% | 54% | 47% | 52% |
| Repeat (%) | 40% (17%) | 74% | 39% | 28% | 35% | 7% |
| Number of genes | 17,065 | 17,797 | 16,988 | 14,451 | 14,567 | 15,291 |
| Gene density kb/per gene | 2.6 | 10.7 | 4.6 | 3.7 | 5.6 | 2.9 |
| Gene Length mean | 1521 bp | 1525 bp | 1614 bp | 1624 bp | 1113 bp | 1503 bp |
| Genes with introns | 73% | 67% | 56% | 53% | 49% | 62% |
| Mean exon number per gene | 4 | 2.8 | 2.6 | 2.6 | 2.0 | 2.6 |
| Exon length mean | 337 bp | 475 bp | 536 bp | 552 bp | 493 bp | 502 bp |
| Intron length mean | 75 bp | 125 bp | 124 bp | 123 bp | 150 bp | 121 bp |
Total contig length adjusted for the regions of haplotype assemblies.
Genome statistics derived from publication of these genomes.
Measured by repeatMasker with de novo RepeatScout.
The repeat content in the assembled sequence is listed in the brackets.
Gene families potentially involved in pathogenesis in Saprolegnia parasitica.
| Gene families | Spa | Pinf | Psoj | Pram | Hpa | Pult | Aph |
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| 0 | 563 | 396 | 374 | 134 | 0 | |
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| 0 | 196 | 100 | 19 | 20 | 26 | + |
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| 0 | 27 | 39 | 59 | 10 | 7 | |
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| 29 | 50 | 66 | 60 | 17 | 45 | |
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| 0 | 4 | 16 | 4 | 2 | 0 | |
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| 0 | 11 | 19 | 13 | 3 | 0 | |
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| 74 | 147 | 183 | 162 | 53 | 66 | |
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| 0 | 33 | 20 | 24 | 6 | 14 | |
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| 2 | 23 | 25 | 16 | 3 | 2 | |
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| 13 | 11 | 8 | 15 | 2 | 17 | |
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| 40 | 4 | 5 | 5 | 0 | 3 | + |
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| 40 | 6 | 11 | 11 | 3 | 4 | |
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| 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
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| 0 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | |
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| 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 | |
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| 16 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
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| 7 | 34 | 24 | 16 | 3 | 15 | |
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| 270 | 194 | 185 | 190 | 143 | 200 | + |
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| 76 | 45 | 32 | 41 | 34 | 34 | |
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| 69 | 51 | 50 | 49 | 48 | 51 | |
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| 85 | 67 | 71 | 69 | 33 | 77 | |
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| 129 | 161 | 186 | 183 | 55 | 136 | + |
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| 543 | 444 | 436 | 432 | 271 | 166 | + |
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| 15 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
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| 9 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Spa = Saprolegnia parasitica, Pinf = Phytophthora infestans, Psoj = P. sojae, Pram = P. ramorum, Hpa = Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis, Pult = Pythium ultimum, Aph = Aphanomyces euteiches.
The presence of the protein families were searched in the Aphanomycete EST database by BLASTP. A positive hit (E value<1e-8 sequence similarity >30%) is indicated by +.
Lectin and lectin-like families.
Figure 2Metabolic adaptations to animal pathogenesis.
(A) Independent degeneration of nitrite and sulfite metabolic pathways in animal pathogens and obligate biotrophic plant pathogens. Red cross indicates the gene encoding the enzyme is absent in the genome. (B) Lineage specific expansion of amino acid transporters. Members from Pythium (black), Hyaloperonospora (green), Albugo (blue) and S. parasitica (red) are included. - The S. parasitica-specific clade is marked with red dots. (C) Secreted peptidase families in S. parasitica and phytopathogenic oomycetes (the average count from the total peptidase genes of P. infestans, P. ramorum, P. sojae, Py. ultimum and H. peronospora) . Peptidase_C1, Peptidase_S8 and Peptidase_S10 are the largest families in S. parasitica. (D) Lineage-specific expansion of peptidase_C1 family. Members from P. sojae, P. ramorum and P. infestans (black) and S. parasitica (red) are included. The S. parasitica-specific clade is marked with red dots.
Figure 3Specialized proteins in the secretome of S. parasitica.
(A) Distributions of major classes of specialized secreted proteins compared between animal and plant pathogenic oomycetes. P. infestans represents Phytophthora species. (B) S. parasitica secreted proteins that carry various lectin domain fusions are schematically drawn. Domains or domain architectures unique to S. parasitica are marked with an asterisk. Proteins containing single domains are also listed. (C) Phylogenetic relationship of lectins. The S. parasitica disintegrin gene (SPRG_01285 groups with bacterial homologs; gal_lectin gene (SPRG_05731)) groups with animal species. All other paralogous S. parasitica disintegrin and gal_lectin genes group closely with these two representatives, respectively, and are not shown.
Figure 4Rainbow trout IgM proteolysis by S. parasitica secreted proteases.
(A) 7-day old culture filtrates were capable of degrading rainbow trout IgM after an overnight incubation at 10°C. (B) Schematic drawing of the domains present in the protease SPRG_14567 (C) Expression pattern of SPRG_14567 in different life stages. The RKPM of RNA-seq data is plotted, and the previously identified effector SpHTP-1 is plotted to show contrasting expression patterns. (D) The recombinant subtilisin-like protease SPRG_14567 was partially purified through tandem ion exchange (SO3 −) and nickel affinity columns (Fractions 1 to 4) following detection in a Western blot using anti-(His)5 HRP antibody. (E) Fractions 2, 3 and soluble proteins from untransformed E. coli were tested for IgM-degrading activity with only the fraction containing the recombinant SPRG_14567 exhibiting proteolysis.
Predicted horizontally transferred genes that may be associated with pathogenesis in Saprolegnia parasitica.
| Pfam function | Functional Description | Possible Phylogenetic origin | Number Genes in the family | Representative gene ID | Subcellular Localization | HGT time Estimate |
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| Disintegrin | proteobacteria | 16 | SPRG_14051 | secreted | recent |
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| Associated with cell surface | - | 1 | SPRG_08424 | secreted | recent |
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| CHAP domain | - | 7 | SPRG_15528 | secreted | |
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| DNA/RNA non-specific endonuclease | bacteria | 6 | SPRG_08128 | secreted | |
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| Haemolysin E | enterobacteria | 9 | SPRG_04818 | membrane | recent |
Subcellular localization is predicted by the N-terminal signal peptide, mitochondrial targeting motif and transmembrane domains.
The time of horizontal gene transfer is estimated by the presence in other oomycetes and coding potential of a given gene. ‘a recently acquired gene’ refers to a gene occurring only in Saprolegnia and having an uncharacteristic coding potential.
Figure 5Differentially expressed genes detected by RNA-Seq.
(A) Percentage of differentially expressed genes in pair-wise comparisons of tissue types. Genes with 4 fold RPKM (reads per kilobase per million) differences were considered to be differentially expressed (negative binomial exact test p<0.001, p value adjusted with Benjamini & Hochberg correction, Table S12) (B) Gene families showing differential expression between vegetative tissue (mycelia and sporulating mycelia) and pre-infection tissues (cysts and germinating cysts). CBEL:fungal Cellulose Binding Domain Like protein, EGF:(Epidermal Growth Factor, gal_lectin: Galactose binding Lectin domain, HST: Heat shock factors, PLAC8: Placenta-specific gene 8 protein, SDF: Sodium Dicarboxylate symporter Family (Table S13). (C) Growth phase specific expression of peptidases and protease inhibitors (Table S14). (D) Relative abundance of S. parasitica and fish transcripts during interaction. (E). S. parasitica transcript distribution in pre-infection versus vegetative tissue. logFC = log2(pre-infection/vegetative/pre-infection); logConc = the log2 of average reads counts per million of each gene in the two tissue types,). Red dots indicate significant differences (p<0.001; negative binomial test).
Figure 6Molecular genetic events associated with the evolution of animal and plant pathogenesis in oomycetes.
The lineages of animal pathogens are colored red and the lineages of plant pathogens are colored green. The basal lineage is colored brown. S and N pathways refer to sulfite and nitrite assimilation, respectively.