| Literature DB >> 30253736 |
Ying Wu1, Xianfeng Ma1,2, Zhiyong Pan3, Shiv D Kale4, Yi Song1,5, Harlan King1, Qiong Zhang1, Christian Presley1, Xiuxin Deng3, Cheng-I Wei6, Shunyuan Xiao7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Powdery mildew (PM) is one of the most important and widespread plant diseases caused by biotrophic fungi. Notably, while monocot (grass) PM fungi exhibit high-level of host-specialization, many dicot PM fungi display a broad host range. To understand such distinct modes of host-adaptation, we sequenced the genomes of four dicot PM biotypes belonging to Golovinomyces cichoracearum or Oidium neolycopersici.Entities:
Keywords: Effectors; Gene conservation; Gene loss; Genome comparison; Host adaptation; Host-pathogen arms race; Powdery mildew
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30253736 PMCID: PMC6156980 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-018-5069-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1An ITS sequence-based phylogenetic tree of 13 powdery mildew pathogens including the four biotypes (indicated by *) used in this study was constructed using Mega 7.0 based on the Neighbor-Joining method. Percent bootstrap support values on the basis of 1000 replicates are shown next to the branches. The scale bar indicates average number of nucleotide substitutions per site. The estimated genome size known from literature or this study is indicated for nine PM biotypes. The ITS sequences were obtained in this study or retrieved from Genbank with the following Accession numbers matching the sequences from top to bottom of the phylogenetic tree: AF011306, FJ378879, AF031283, KX776199, KJ539202, HM449077, AF009176, AF031282, KR611314, KJ184337, HM484333, AF011321, AF011322, EF634440
Characterization of host-ranges of four dicot powdery mildew biotypesa
| Biotypesb | Tomato | Cucumber | Tobacco | Arabidopsis | Sow thistle | Arabidopsis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| – | ++++ | ++ | ++++ | – | ++++ | |
| – | +/− | – | +/− | ++++ | ++++ | |
| ++++ | +++ | +++ | ++ | – | ++++ | |
| – | – | ++++ | + | – | ++++ |
aThe infection phenotypes were assessed visually or with the aid of a microscope. “-”, no or poor germination of conidia without successful penetration; “+/−”, successful penetration but without sporulation; “+”, poor sporulation with HR; “++”, moderate sporulation with no or weak HR; “+++”, good sporulation; “++++”, profuse sporulation
bGcC1, Golovinomyces cichoracearum UCSC1; GcM1, G. cichoracearum UMSG1; OnM2, Oidium neolycopersici UMSG2; GcM3, G. cichoracearum UMSG3
Genome sequence analysis and gene prediction of four dicot powdery mildew biotypes
| PM Biotype | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raw Reads | 84,214,356 | 89,713,850 | 86,621,454 | 82,892,794 |
| Trimmed Reads | 81,469,810 | 85,393,708 | 84,044,588 | 78,373,242 |
| Scaffolds | 22,821 | 25,102 | 14,365 | 22,581 |
| N50 scaffold length | 4625 | 4846 | 6751 | 4696 |
| % Scaffolds | 33.3 | 35 | 35.6 | 32 |
| % Genome | 39.8 | 44 | 30.1 | 38 |
| Conitgs | 30,165 | 33,822 | 18,861 | 29,563 |
| N50 contig length | 4095 | 4312 | 5946 | 4253 |
| CEGMAa | 99% / 99% | 99% / 99% | 99% / 99% | 99% / 99% |
| Assembly Size (Mb) | 64.64 | 71.27 | 45.08 | 65.02 |
| Genome sizeb (Mb) | 173.8 | 221.8 | 120 | 195.8 |
| Sequencing depth | 50× | 46× | 73× | 44× |
| Gene number | 6718 | 6620 | 6961 | 6865 |
| SPc gene number | 472 | 478 | 499 | 489 |
| CSEPd gene number | 159 | 163 | 175 | 174 |
aCEGMA: Core Eukaryotic Genes Mapping Approach. Two hundred forty-eight core eukaryotic genes are used to evaluate the completeness of each scaffold
bGenome size is estimated by K-mer frequency
cSP: Secreted proteins without transmembrane domain
dCSEP: Candidate secreted effector proteins without homologs outside powdery mildew fungi
Fig. 2Number of Ascomycete core genes (ACGs)missing in each PM biotype. Group I: those missing in all ten PM fungi; Group II: those missing in all dicot PM fungi but present in all monocot PM fungi; Group III: those missing in all monocot PM fungi but present in all dicot PM fungi; Group IV: 30 ACGs missing in both dicot and monocot PM fungi but not all. Group V: 35 ACGs missing in some dicot PM fungi but present in all monocot PM fungi; Group VI: 1 ACGs missing in some monocot PM fungi but present in all dicot PM fungi; GcC1: Golovinomyces cichoracearum UCSC1; GcM1: G. cichoracearum UMSG1; OnM2: Oidium neolycopersici UMSG2; GcM3: G. cichoracearum UMSG3; EnC: Erysiphe necator C-strain; BghD: Blumeria graminis f.sp. hordei DH14; BghR1: Blumeria graminis f.sp. hordei RACE1; Bgt: B. g. f.sp. tritici; Detailed information is provided in Additional file 2: Table S4
Fig. 3Identification of total gene clusters (a), secreted protein (SP) gene clusters (b) and candidate secreted effector protein (CSEP) gene clusters (c) across eight PM genomes. The central pie charts represent the proportion of gene clusters with different conservations; the peripheral circles represent the proportion of genes belonging to different clusters in each biotypes. The numbers outside the circle represent the BS genes for the eight indicated PM fungi (for details see Additional file 2: Tables S5 to S7). Core: gene clusters with members from all of the eight PM genomes (a represents clusters containing only one members from each of the eight PM genome). L-core: gene clusters with members from seven of the eight PM genomes, which are likely core clusters. Dicot: gene clusters with members from only the dicot PM genomes (b represents clusters containing members from all of the five dicot PM genomes). Monocot: gene clusters with members from only the monocot PM genomes. Other: gene clusters with member from both monocot and dicot PM fungi, but not all eight PM fungi. BS: biotype-specific genes which can not group with other genes or can only group with genes from its own genome. GcC1: Golovinomyces cichoracearum UCSC1; GcM1: G. cichoracearum UMSG1; OnM2: Oidium neolycopersici UMSG2; GcM3: G. cichoracearum UMSG3; EnC: Erysiphe necator C-strain; BghD: Blumeria graminis f.sp. Hordei DH14; BghR1: Blumeria graminis f.sp. Hordei RACE1; Bgt: B. graminis f.sp. tritici
Fig. 4Calculation and frequency distribution of the ratio of the non-synonymous substitution rate (Ka) to the synonymous substitution rate (Ks) for genes in the specified categories. a A comparison among core gene clusters present in all the eight PM fungi (Core) with lineage-specific clusters (LS) and candidate secreted effector protein clusters (CSEP). b A comparison between dicot and monocot PM genes. c A comparison between dicot PM-specific CSEP clusters and monocot PM-specific CSEP clusters. The x-axis are Ka/Ks ranges
Fig. 5A Comparative Gene Ontology (GO) term enrichment analysis for dicot PM secreted protein genes (Dicot PM SPs) (Right) and monocot PM secreted protein genes (Monocot PM SPs) (Left). Fourteen categories of molecular functions which are significantly enriched in the secreted proteins with at least 2 fold change were selectively presented. The X-axis is the proportion of LS genes in the corresponding GO category
Number of genes differentially expressed in haustoria relative to mycelia in OnM2 and GcM3
| Category | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All | SP | CSEP | All | SP | CSEP | |
| Up | 644 | 86 | 47 | 894 | 128 | 65 |
| 9.25% | 17.23% | 26.86% | 13.02% | 26.18% | 37.36% | |
| Down | 474 | 68 | 22 | 990 | 112 | 22 |
| 6.81% | 13.63% | 12.57% | 14.42% | 22.90% | 12.64% | |
| Total | 1118 | 154 | 69 | 1884 | 240 | 87 |
| 16.06% | 30.86% | 39.43% | 27.44% | 49.08% | 50.00% | |
Genes with expression fold change (haustoria/mycelia) ≥2 and q-value < 0.05 are considered as differentially expressed