| Literature DB >> 30420746 |
Claude Murat1, Thibaut Payen2, Benjamin Noel3, Alan Kuo4, Emmanuelle Morin2, Juan Chen2,5, Annegret Kohler2, Krisztina Krizsán6, Raffaella Balestrini7, Corinne Da Silva3, Barbara Montanini8, Mathieu Hainaut9, Elisabetta Levati8, Kerrie W Barry4, Beatrice Belfiori10, Nicolas Cichocki2, Alicia Clum4, Rhyan B Dockter4, Laure Fauchery2, Julie Guy3, Mirco Iotti11, François Le Tacon2, Erika A Lindquist4, Anna Lipzen4, Fabienne Malagnac12, Antonietta Mello7, Virginie Molinier13,14, Shingo Miyauchi2, Julie Poulain3, Claudia Riccioni10, Andrea Rubini10, Yaron Sitrit15, Richard Splivallo16, Stefanie Traeger17, Mei Wang4, Lucia Žifčáková18, Daniel Wipf13, Alessandra Zambonelli19, Francesco Paolocci10, Minou Nowrousian17, Simone Ottonello8, Petr Baldrian18, Joseph W Spatafora20, Bernard Henrissat9,21,22, Laszlo G Nagy6, Jean-Marc Aury3, Patrick Wincker3, Igor V Grigoriev4,23, Paola Bonfante24, Francis M Martin25,26.
Abstract
Tuberaceae is one of the most diverse lineages of symbiotic truffle-forming fungi. To understand the molecular underpinning of the ectomycorrhizal truffle lifestyle, we compared the genomes of Piedmont white truffle (Tuber magnatum), Périgord black truffle (Tuber melanosporum), Burgundy truffle (Tuber aestivum), pig truffle (Choiromyces venosus) and desert truffle (Terfezia boudieri) to saprotrophic Pezizomycetes. Reconstructed gene duplication/loss histories along a time-calibrated phylogeny of Ascomycetes revealed that Tuberaceae-specific traits may be related to a higher gene diversification rate. Genomic features in Tuber species appear to be very similar, with high transposon content, few genes coding lignocellulose-degrading enzymes, a substantial set of lineage-specific fruiting-body-upregulated genes and high expression of genes involved in volatile organic compound metabolism. Developmental and metabolic pathways expressed in ectomycorrhizae and fruiting bodies of T. magnatum and T. melanosporum are unexpectedly very similar, owing to the fact that they diverged ~100 Ma. Volatile organic compounds from pungent truffle odours are not the products of Tuber-specific gene innovations, but rely on the differential expression of an existing gene repertoire. These genomic resources will help to address fundamental questions in the evolution of the truffle lifestyle and the ecology of fungi that have been praised as food delicacies for centuries.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30420746 DOI: 10.1038/s41559-018-0710-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Ecol Evol ISSN: 2397-334X Impact factor: 15.460