| Literature DB >> 25384908 |
Karl-Magnus Andersson, Dharmendra Kumar, Johan Bentzer, Eva Friman, Dag Ahrén, Anders Tunlid1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nematode-trapping fungi are soil-living fungi that capture and kill nematodes using special hyphal structures called traps. They display a large diversity of trapping mechanisms and differ in their host preferences. To provide insights into the genetic basis for this variation, we compared the transcriptome expressed by three species of nematode-trapping fungi (Arthrobotrys oligospora, Monacrosporium cionopagum and Arthrobotrys dactyloides, which use adhesive nets, adhesive branches or constricting rings, respectively, to trap nematodes) during infection of two different plant-pathogenic nematode hosts (the root knot nematode Meloidogyne hapla and the sugar beet cyst nematode Heterodera schachtii).Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25384908 PMCID: PMC4237727 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-15-968
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Micrographs of fungal and nematode interactions. (A) Arthrobotrys dactyloides (constricting rings) after trapping the root knot nematode Meloidogyne hapla (bar = 50 μm). (B) Monacrosporium cionopagum (adhesive branches) after trapping and immobilizing the sugar beet cyst nematode Heterodera schachtii (bar = 20 μm). (C) Arthrobotrys oligospora (adhesive nets) after trapping, immobilization and colonization of H. schachtii (bar = 20 μm).
Infection of plant parasitic nematodes by nematode-trapping fungi
| Ad(Mh) | Ao(Mh) | Ad(Hs) | Ao(Hs) | Mc(Hs) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| 3 h | 80.3 (3.8) | ||||
| 7 h | 40.5 (2.6) | ||||
| 12 h | 30.3 (3.7) | 50.0 (3.3) | 50.6 (2.5) | ||
|
| |||||
| 12 h | 90.8 (2.5) | 30.4 (2.4) | |||
| 24 h | 31.0 (2.4) | ||||
| 32 h | 50.7 (2.9) | ||||
| 36 h | 60.7 (4.1) | ||||
|
| |||||
| 20 h | 92.7 (3.2) | ||||
| 24 h | 64.7 (2.3) | ||||
| 36 h | 35.3 (3.0) | ||||
| 40 h | 60.3 (2.7) | ||||
| 48 h | 55.2 (2.4) |
aShown is the percentage (mean (SD, n = 10)) of the added nematodes that were trapped, paralyzed and colonized. Ao(Mh) denotes A. oligospora infecting M. hapla; Ao(Hs), A. oligospora infecting H. schachtii; Ad(Mh), A. dactyloides infecting M. hapla; Ad(Hs), A. dactyloides infecting H. schachtii; and Mc(Hs), M. cionopagum infecting H. schachtii.
Characterization of the transcriptome libraries
| Library a | Ao(Mh) | Ao(Hs) | Ad(Mh) | Ad(Hs) | Mc(Hs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Total number of reads | 114 418 | 70 061 | 226 301 | 191 632 | 245 264 |
| Filtered readsb | 97 770 | 58 208 | 183 433 | 141 506 | 206 854 |
|
| |||||
| Total number of isotigs | 2 663 | 1 354 | 4 517 | 4 003 | 5 258 |
| Fungal isotigs | 2 514 | 1 261 | 4 021 | 3 560 | 4 741 |
| Nematode isotigs | 11 | 20 | 21 | 18 | 44 |
| Others | 0 | 5 | 8 | 4 | 16 |
| Filtered isotigsc | 2 634 | 1 318 | 4 428 | 3 926 | 5 140 |
| (Average size, bp) | (1 160) | (1 008) | (1 237) | (1 128) | (1 167) |
| Isotigs with Pfam | 1 730 | 856 | 2 317 | 2 504 | 3 071 |
| Number of unique Pfam | 1 251 | 707 | 1 555 | 1 592 | 1 847 |
| Isotigs with UniRef50 | 2 485 | 1 239 | 3 916 | 3 472 | 4 601 |
| Unique UniRef50 | 2 326 | 1 174 | 3 101 | 3 230 | 3 981 |
|
| |||||
| Number of mapped reads | 73 623 | 40 051 | |||
| Number of gene modelsd | 7 351 | 6 377 |
aThe following five combinations of fungi and nematodes were characterized: A. oligospora and M. hapla (Ao(Mh)), A. oligospora and H. schachtii (Ao(Hs)), A. dactyloides and M. hapla (Ad(Mh)), A. dactyloides and H. schachtii (Ad(Hs)), and M. cionopagum and H. schachtii (Mc(Hs)).
bNumber of reads after removal of rRNA sequences.
cNumber of isotigs after removal of non-fungal sequences, low abundance isotigs (less than 5 reads), and short isotigs (<100 bp).
dNumber of gene models that have ≥1 read.
Figure 2Flowchart of the data analysis. Five different cDNA libraries were sequenced and the reads were used to generate three different data sets. First, the data set “Highly expressed transcripts” were retrieved by assembling the reads of each library into isotigs (ranscripts) and normalizing the read counts. Using this approach, the 500 most highly expressed transcripts in each library were retrieved (the “Top 500” data set). Second, the data set “Differentially expressed UniRef50 clusters” was obtained by matching the isotig sequences using BLASTX [25] to UniRef50 clusters [26]. The procedure organized the isotigs into putative orthologs for which expression levels could directly be compared between the five libraries. Third, to identify the data set “Host-specific gene expression” the reads from the two libraries of A. oligospora were mapped to the genome sequence of this fungus [19]. Ao(Mh) denotes A. oligospora and M. hapla; Ao(Hs), A. oligospora and H. schachtii; Ad(Mh), A. dactyloides and M. hapla; Ad(Hs), A. dactyloides and H. schachtii; and Mc(Hs), M. cionopagum and H. schachtii. Further details of the libraries are shown in Table 2.
Figure 3Expression patterns of Pfam domains among the most highly expressed transcripts. (A) Principal component analysis (PCA) of the abundance of Pfam domains. Each point in the PCA plot corresponds to a cDNA library. Ao(Mh) denotes A. oligospora and M. hapla; Ao(Hs), A. oligospora and H. schachtii; Ad(Mh), A. dactyloides and M. hapla; Ad(Hs), A. dactyloides and H. schachtii; and Mc(Hs), M. cionopagum and H. schachtii. The PCA was performed on the read counts of 700 Pfam domains (log2 transformed (counts + 1)). (B) Venn diagram of highly expressed Pfam domains. Shown is the distribution of the in total 700 unique Pfam domains that were found among the top 500 most expressed transcripts in A. oligospora (Ao), A. dactyloides (Ad) and M. cionopagum (Mc). ‘Ao’ contains all domains that were found among the 500 most expressed transcript in one or in both of the Ao(Mh) and Ao(Hs) libraries. ‘Ad’ contains all domains that were found among the 500 most expressed transcripts in one or in both of the Ad(Mh) and Ad(Hs) libraries. ‘Mc’ contains all domains that were found among the 500 most expressed transcript in Mc(Hs).
Figure 4Expression levels of highly expressed UniRef50 clusters. Log2 scatter plot of gene expression pattern between A. oligospora and A. dactyloides infecting different nematodes (top) and H. schachtii and M. hapla infected by different fungi (bottom). The gene expression levels (normalized, log2-transformed read counts) of the 5% most highly expressed UniRef50 proteins represented by 326 unique IDs are shown. The Pearson correlation coefficients (r) of the comparisons are also shown. The diagonal line (y = x) shows UniRef50 clusters with nearly identical expression levels. The dotted lines correspond to a twofold expression difference. The numbers of clusters that differ in expression level more than twofold are shown in parentheses.
Proportion (%) of secreted proteins and orphans
| Category | Ao(Mh) | Ao(Hs) | Ad(Mh) | Ad(Hs) | Mc(Hs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| All isotigs | 8.4 | 9.4 | 7.8 | 8.6 | 9.1 |
| Top 500 most expressed isotigs | 12.2 | 12.6 | 12.6 | 10.8 | 13.8 |
| ( | (0.00031) | (0.00070) | (0.00002) | (0.01205) | (0.00008) |
|
| |||||
| All isotigs | 6.6 | 7.1 | 8.1 | 7.5 | 6.9 |
| Top 500 most expressed isotigs | 7.8 | 7.6 | 12.8 | 9.6 | 9.2 |
| ( | (0.03792) | (0.07609) | (0.00004) | (0.01176) | (0.00818) |
aProportion of secreted proteins and orphans among all identified isotigs (i.e. transcripts) and among the 500 most expressed isotigs in each sample. The samples are: A. oligospora infecting M. hapla (Ao(Mh)), A. oligospora infecting H. schachtii (Ao(Hs)), A. dactyloides infecting M. hapla (Ad(Mh)), A. dactyloides infecting H. schachtii (Ad(Hs)), and M. cionopagum infecting H. schachtii (Mc(Hs)).
bThe probability (P) of observing a given number of isotigs within the functional category by chance using the hypergeometric distribution.
cIsotigs that lack known homologs and do not contain any Pfam domains.
Pfam domains expressed by all fungi during nematode infection
| Putative functions | Pfam domains |
|---|---|
| Peptidase |
|
| Cell-surface proteins |
|
| Others |
|
| Stress response, chaperons | Thioredoxin (PF00085); Glutathione S-transferase (PF00043); Catalase (PF00199); AhpC/TSA family (PF00578); DnaJ (PF00226); HSP20 (PF00011); HSP70 (PF00012); HSP90 (PF00183); Peptidylprolyl isomerase (PF00254, PF00160) |
| Cell signaling | RHO protein GDP dissociation inhibitor (PF02115); ADP Ribosylation Factors (ARFs) (PF00025); 14-3-3- proteins (PF00244); Pkinase (PF00069); Ras (PF00071) |
| Calcium-binding protein | Calreticulin (PF00262); EF-hand motif (PF13499) |
| Cytoskeleton | Actin (PF00022); Cofilin (PF00241); Profilin (PF00235); Tropomyosin (PF12718); Tubulin (PF00091) |
| Autophagy | Atg8 (PF02991) |
| Peroxisome | Membrane protein Mpv17_PMP22 (PF04117) |
| Trancription | Multiprotein bridging factor 1 (PF08523); Homeobox (PF00046); TATA binding protein (PF00352); bZIP Transcription factor (PF00170, PF07716); Histone (PF00125, PF00538); Nucleosome assembly protein (PF00956); Helicases (PF00270, PF00271) |
| Membrane transport | ABC transporter (PF00005) Amino acids permease (PF00324); Ammonium transporter (PF00909); Major Facilitator Superfamily (PF07690); Sugar and others (PF00083); Porin (PF01459) |
| Vesicular transport | Syntaxin (PF05739); Synaptobrevin (PF00957); Rab GDP dissociation inhibitors (PF00996) |
| Metabolism, glycolysis/gluconeogenesis | Enolase (PF03952); Fructose-bisphosphate aldolase (PF01116); Triose-phosphate isomerase (PF00121); Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (PF00044); Phosphoglycerate kinase (PF00162); Pyruvate kinase (PF00224); Pyruvate carboxylase (PF00682) |
| Metabolism, pentose phosphate pathway | Phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (PF03446, PF00479); Transaldolase (PF00923); Transketolase (PF00456) |
| Metabolism, TCA | lactate/malate dehydrogenase (PF02866, PF00056); Succinyl coenzyme A synthetase (PF00549) |
| Metabolism, energy | Cyt-b5 (PF00173); ATP synthase (PF00887, PF00137); mitochondrial carrier (PF00153); ATPases (PF00006, PF02874) |
| Metabolism, amino acids | Glutamine amidotransferases (PF00310); NAD-specific glutamate dehydrogenase (PF10712); Glutamine synthetase (PF03951) |
| Metabolism, miscellaneous | Glycoside hydrolase family 1 (PF00232); Biotin-requiring enzyme (PF00364) aldo-keto reductase family (PF00248); Aldehyde dehydrogenase family (PF00171); Short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases family (PF00106); Pyrophosphatase (PF00719); Myo-inositol-1-phosphate synthase(PF01658, PF07994); FA desaturase (PF00487); Nucleoside diphosphate kinase (PF00334); UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (PF01704); Transketolase, pyrimidine binding domain (PF02779); ATPase (PF00004); CoA binding domain (PF02629) ATP-grasp_2 (PF08442); Calcineurin-like phosphoesterase (PF00149); Epimerase (PF01370) |
| Protein degradation | Proteasome (PF00227, PF10584); Ubiquitination (PF00240, PF00240, PF00179) |
| Protein synthesis | Elongation factors (PF10587, PF01873, PF00009); tRNA synthetases (PF00587); translation, initiation factors W2 (PF02020), SUI1 (PF01253), MIF4G (PF02854); Ribosomal proteins (PF00428, PF00428, PF00687, PF00466, PF00238, PF00827, PF00252, PF14204, PF01775,PF00828, PF00861, PF01280, PF03947, PF01157, PF01776, PF01246, PF01777, PF00831, PF00297, PF01198, PF01655, PF01780, PF01907, PF01020, PF00935, PF00281, PF00347, PF01159, PF01248, PF00411, PF00164, PF00416, PF00253, PF00833, PF00203, PF01090, PF00318, PF01282, PF03297,PF01283, PF01667, PF01015, PF00163, PF00333, PF00177, PF00410, PF01201, PF00380, PF08071) |
aShown are Pfam domains that were found among the top 500 most expressed isotigs in at least one library of each fungus and that are shared between all three fungi. In total 206 Pfam domains were found in this cohort (c.f. Figure 3B; Additional file 6). Pfam domains encoding protein motifs with unspecific or unknown functions are not shown. Bold indicates domains that were found among 25 expanded Pfam domains identified in the genome of M. haptotylum [20].
Figure 5Heat map of gene expression levels of UniRef50 clusters. Gene expression levels of the 5% most highly expressed UniRef50 clusters passing a variance filtering of 0.3 (total 160) are shown. I to IX indicate nine clusters that were identified using hierarchical clustering of normalized, log2-transformed read counts (+1). The right panels shows annotations of the UniRef50 cluster sequences based on the presence of Pfam domains (Additional file 7). Bold indicates domains that were found among 25 expanded Pfam domains identified in the genome of M. haptotylum[20]. Ao(Mh) denotes A. oligospora and M. hapla; Ao(Hs), A. oligospora and H. schachtii; Ad(Mh), A. dactyloides and M. hapla; Ad(Hs), A. dactyloides and H. schachtii; and Mc(Hs), M. cionopagum and H. schachtii.
Figure 6Host-specific gene expression in . Scatter plot of normalized mapped reads of A. oligospora and H. schachtii (Ao(Hs)) versus A. oligospora and M. hapla (Ao(Mh)). Genes that were regulated (≥1 read) in both libraries and that had ≥5 reads in any of the libraries were included in the analysis, 4 138 genes in total. The Pearson correlation coefficient (r) of the comparison is also shown. The diagonal line (y = x) shows transcripts with near identical expression levels. The dotted lines correspond to a five-fold expression difference.
Differentially expressed genes encoding secreted proteins in during infection of or
| UniProt ID | Description b | Pfam | Length c | Fold change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| G1X4P0 | Histidine acid phosphatase | His_Phos_2 | 476 | 9.1 |
| G1XTC9 | Patched sphingolipid transporter | Patched | 1 292 | 9.1 |
| G1XF88 | Uncharacterized protein | - | 251e | 7.7 |
| G1XGH3 | IgE-binding protein | - | 195 | 7.4 |
| G1XHE8d | - | - | 196e | 6.9 |
| G1X1U4 | Glucosidase 2 subunit beta | - | 553 | 6.3 |
| G1X8R3 | GPI anchored cell-wall protein | But2 | 328 | 6.2 |
| G1XCM7 | Beta-galactosidase | Glyco_hydro_35, BetaGal_ dom2, BetaGal_dom3, BetaGal_dom4_5 | 982 | 5.7 |
| G1XET4 | Peptidase S41 | Peptidase_S41 | 702 | 5.7 |
| G1XGI5 | Uncharacterized protein | - | 107e | 5.3 |
| G1XPV3 | Uncharacterized protein | - | 173e | 5.3 |
| G1XJP0 | Uncharacterized protein | - | 606 | 5.1 |
| G1XLE5 | Aminopeptidase Y | PA, Peptidase_M28 | 503 | 5.1 |
|
| ||||
| G1X7Q6d | - | - | 300 | 15.8 |
| G1XQA9 | Uncharacterized protein | - | 707 | 15.8 |
| G1XU57 | ABC transporter | ABC_tran, ABC2_membrane | 1 047 | 15.8 |
| G1X110d | - | - | 151e | 11.4 |
| G1XR64 | Uncharacterized protein | DUF3129 | 656 | 10.5 |
| G1XF27 | WSC-domain-containing protein | WSC | 625 | 9.6 |
| G1XEV7 | Chitinase | Glyco_hydro_18, LysM | 1 232 | 8.8 |
| G1XM84 | Tyrosinase | Tyrosinase | 387 | 8.8 |
| G1XC55 | Uncharacterized protein | DUF3129 | 454 | 6.4 |
aGenes encoding proteins with a predicted secretion signal that were upregulated at least 5-fold in the sample A. oligospora infecting M. hapla (Ao(Mh)) compared to the sample A. oligospora infecting H. schachtii (Ao(Hs)) and in Ao(Hs) compared to Ao(Mh). Genes that were expressed (≥1 read) in both libraries and that had ≥5 read in any of the libraries were included in the analysis, in total 4 138 genes.
bNon-annotated genes of A. oligospora were further characterized by searches through the UniProt database [47] using the BLASTP algorithm [25] with an E-value threshold of 1e-10. Fungal sequences were chosen among the top hits.
cThe length of the protein sequence in aa.
dOrphan, protein that lacks known homologs and does not contain any Pfam domains.
eSmall secreted protein (SSP) with unknown function. SSPs were defined as secreted proteins with a length of less than 300 aa.