Literature DB >> 31604798

Comparative Genomics and Transcriptomics To Analyze Fruiting Body Development in Filamentous Ascomycetes.

Ramona Lütkenhaus1, Stefanie Traeger1, Jan Breuer1, Laia Carreté2, Alan Kuo3, Anna Lipzen3, Jasmyn Pangilinan3, David Dilworth3, Laura Sandor3, Stefanie Pöggeler4, Toni Gabaldón2,5,6, Kerrie Barry2, Igor V Grigoriev3,7, Minou Nowrousian8.   

Abstract

Many filamentous ascomycetes develop three-dimensional fruiting bodies for production and dispersal of sexual spores. Fruiting bodies are among the most complex structures differentiated by ascomycetes; however, the molecular mechanisms underlying this process are insufficiently understood. Previous comparative transcriptomics analyses of fruiting body development in different ascomycetes suggested that there might be a core set of genes that are transcriptionally regulated in a similar manner across species. Conserved patterns of gene expression can be indicative of functional relevance, and therefore such a set of genes might constitute promising candidates for functional analyses. In this study, we have sequenced the genome of the Pezizomycete Ascodesmis nigricans, and performed comparative transcriptomics of developing fruiting bodies of this fungus, the Pezizomycete Pyronema confluens, and the Sordariomycete Sordaria macrospora With only 27 Mb, the A. nigricans genome is the smallest Pezizomycete genome sequenced to date. Comparative transcriptomics indicated that gene expression patterns in developing fruiting bodies of the three species are more similar to each other than to nonsexual hyphae of the same species. An analysis of 83 genes that are upregulated only during fruiting body development in all three species revealed 23 genes encoding proteins with predicted roles in vesicle transport, the endomembrane system, or transport across membranes, and 13 genes encoding proteins with predicted roles in chromatin organization or the regulation of gene expression. Among four genes chosen for functional analysis by deletion in S. macrospora, three were shown to be involved in fruiting body formation, including two predicted chromatin modifier genes.
Copyright © 2019 by the Genetics Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Ascodesmis nigricans; Pyronema confluens; Sordaria macrospora; comparative transcriptomics; fruiting body development

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31604798      PMCID: PMC6893386          DOI: 10.1534/genetics.119.302749

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genetics        ISSN: 0016-6731            Impact factor:   4.562


  109 in total

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Authors:  S Pöggeler; M Nowrousian; C Ringelberg; J J Loros; J C Dunlap; U Kück
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