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Frequent transitions in mating-type locus chromosomal organization in Malassezia and early steps in sexual reproduction

Fungi in the basidiomycete genus Malassezia are the most prevalent eukaryotic microbes resident on the skin of human and other warm-blooded animals and have been implicated in skin diseases and systemic disorders. Analysis of Malassezia genomes revealed that key adaptations to the skin microenvironm...

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Autores principales: Coelho, Marco A., Ianiri, Giuseppe, David-Palma, Márcia, Theelen, Bart, Goyal, Rohit, Narayanan, Aswathy, Lorch, Jeffrey M., Sanyal, Kaustuv, Boekhout, Teun, Heitman, Joseph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10055393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36993584
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.25.534224
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author Coelho, Marco A.
Ianiri, Giuseppe
David-Palma, Márcia
Theelen, Bart
Goyal, Rohit
Narayanan, Aswathy
Lorch, Jeffrey M.
Sanyal, Kaustuv
Boekhout, Teun
Heitman, Joseph
author_facet Coelho, Marco A.
Ianiri, Giuseppe
David-Palma, Márcia
Theelen, Bart
Goyal, Rohit
Narayanan, Aswathy
Lorch, Jeffrey M.
Sanyal, Kaustuv
Boekhout, Teun
Heitman, Joseph
author_sort Coelho, Marco A.
collection PubMed
description Fungi in the basidiomycete genus Malassezia are the most prevalent eukaryotic microbes resident on the skin of human and other warm-blooded animals and have been implicated in skin diseases and systemic disorders. Analysis of Malassezia genomes revealed that key adaptations to the skin microenvironment have a direct genomic basis, and the identification of mating/meiotic genes suggests a capacity to reproduce sexually, even though no sexual cycle has yet been observed. In contrast to other bipolar or tetrapolar basidiomycetes that have either two linked mating-type-determining (MAT) loci or two MAT loci on separate chromosomes, in Malassezia species studied thus far the two MAT loci are arranged in a pseudobipolar configuration (linked on the same chromosome but capable of recombining). By incorporating newly generated chromosome-level genome assemblies, and an improved Malassezia phylogeny, we infer that the pseudobipolar arrangement was the ancestral state of this group and revealed six independent transitions to tetrapolarity, seemingly driven by centromere fission or translocations in centromere-flanking regions. Additionally, in an approach to uncover a sexual cycle, Malassezia furfur strains were engineered to express different MAT alleles in the same cell. The resulting strains produce hyphae reminiscent of early steps in sexual development and display upregulation of genes associated with sexual development as well as others encoding lipases and a protease potentially relevant for pathogenesis of the fungus. Our study reveals a previously unseen genomic relocation of mating-type loci in fungi and provides insight towards the discovery of a sexual cycle in Malassezia, with possible implications for pathogenicity.
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spelling pubmed-100553932023-03-30 Frequent transitions in mating-type locus chromosomal organization in Malassezia and early steps in sexual reproduction Coelho, Marco A. Ianiri, Giuseppe David-Palma, Márcia Theelen, Bart Goyal, Rohit Narayanan, Aswathy Lorch, Jeffrey M. Sanyal, Kaustuv Boekhout, Teun Heitman, Joseph bioRxiv Article Fungi in the basidiomycete genus Malassezia are the most prevalent eukaryotic microbes resident on the skin of human and other warm-blooded animals and have been implicated in skin diseases and systemic disorders. Analysis of Malassezia genomes revealed that key adaptations to the skin microenvironment have a direct genomic basis, and the identification of mating/meiotic genes suggests a capacity to reproduce sexually, even though no sexual cycle has yet been observed. In contrast to other bipolar or tetrapolar basidiomycetes that have either two linked mating-type-determining (MAT) loci or two MAT loci on separate chromosomes, in Malassezia species studied thus far the two MAT loci are arranged in a pseudobipolar configuration (linked on the same chromosome but capable of recombining). By incorporating newly generated chromosome-level genome assemblies, and an improved Malassezia phylogeny, we infer that the pseudobipolar arrangement was the ancestral state of this group and revealed six independent transitions to tetrapolarity, seemingly driven by centromere fission or translocations in centromere-flanking regions. Additionally, in an approach to uncover a sexual cycle, Malassezia furfur strains were engineered to express different MAT alleles in the same cell. The resulting strains produce hyphae reminiscent of early steps in sexual development and display upregulation of genes associated with sexual development as well as others encoding lipases and a protease potentially relevant for pathogenesis of the fungus. Our study reveals a previously unseen genomic relocation of mating-type loci in fungi and provides insight towards the discovery of a sexual cycle in Malassezia, with possible implications for pathogenicity. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-06-09 /pmc/articles/PMC10055393/ /pubmed/36993584 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.25.534224 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) , which allows reusers to copy and distribute the material in any medium or format in unadapted form only, for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator.
spellingShingle Article
Coelho, Marco A.
Ianiri, Giuseppe
David-Palma, Márcia
Theelen, Bart
Goyal, Rohit
Narayanan, Aswathy
Lorch, Jeffrey M.
Sanyal, Kaustuv
Boekhout, Teun
Heitman, Joseph
Frequent transitions in mating-type locus chromosomal organization in Malassezia and early steps in sexual reproduction
title Frequent transitions in mating-type locus chromosomal organization in Malassezia and early steps in sexual reproduction
title_full Frequent transitions in mating-type locus chromosomal organization in Malassezia and early steps in sexual reproduction
title_fullStr Frequent transitions in mating-type locus chromosomal organization in Malassezia and early steps in sexual reproduction
title_full_unstemmed Frequent transitions in mating-type locus chromosomal organization in Malassezia and early steps in sexual reproduction
title_short Frequent transitions in mating-type locus chromosomal organization in Malassezia and early steps in sexual reproduction
title_sort frequent transitions in mating-type locus chromosomal organization in malassezia and early steps in sexual reproduction
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10055393/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36993584
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.25.534224
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