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Comparative Molecular Evolution of Trichoderma Chitinases in Response to Mycoparasitic Interactions

Certain species of the fungal genus Trichoderma are potent mycoparasites and are used for biological control of fungal diseases on agricultural crops. In Trichoderma, whole-genome sequencing reveal between 20 and 36 different genes encoding chitinases, hydrolytic enzymes that are involved in the myc...

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Autores principales: Ihrmark, Katarina, Asmail, Nashwan, Ubhayasekera, Wimal, Melin, Petter, Stenlid, Jan, Karlsson, Magnus
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Libertas Academica 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2865166/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20454524
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author Ihrmark, Katarina
Asmail, Nashwan
Ubhayasekera, Wimal
Melin, Petter
Stenlid, Jan
Karlsson, Magnus
author_facet Ihrmark, Katarina
Asmail, Nashwan
Ubhayasekera, Wimal
Melin, Petter
Stenlid, Jan
Karlsson, Magnus
author_sort Ihrmark, Katarina
collection PubMed
description Certain species of the fungal genus Trichoderma are potent mycoparasites and are used for biological control of fungal diseases on agricultural crops. In Trichoderma, whole-genome sequencing reveal between 20 and 36 different genes encoding chitinases, hydrolytic enzymes that are involved in the mycoparasitic attack. Sequences of Trichoderma chitinase genes chi18-5, chi18-13, chi18-15 and chi18-17, which all exhibit specific expression during mycoparasitism-related conditions, were determined from up to 13 different taxa and studied with regard to their evolutionary patterns. Two of them, chi18-13 and chi18-17, are members of the B1/B2 chitinase subgroup that have expanded significantly in paralog number in mycoparasitic Hypocrea atroviridis and H. virens. Chi18-13 contains two codons that evolve under positive selection and seven groups of co-evolving sites. Chi18-15 displays a unique codon-usage and contains five codons that evolve under positive selection and three groups of co-evolving sites. Regions of high amino acid variability are preferentially localized to substrate- or product side of the catalytic clefts. Differences in amino acid diversity/conservation patterns between different Trichoderma clades are observed. These observations show that Trichoderma chitinases chi18-13 and chi18-15 evolve in a manner consistent with rapid co-evolutionary interactions and identifies putative target regions involved in determining substrate-specificity.
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spelling pubmed-28651662010-05-07 Comparative Molecular Evolution of Trichoderma Chitinases in Response to Mycoparasitic Interactions Ihrmark, Katarina Asmail, Nashwan Ubhayasekera, Wimal Melin, Petter Stenlid, Jan Karlsson, Magnus Evol Bioinform Online Original Research Certain species of the fungal genus Trichoderma are potent mycoparasites and are used for biological control of fungal diseases on agricultural crops. In Trichoderma, whole-genome sequencing reveal between 20 and 36 different genes encoding chitinases, hydrolytic enzymes that are involved in the mycoparasitic attack. Sequences of Trichoderma chitinase genes chi18-5, chi18-13, chi18-15 and chi18-17, which all exhibit specific expression during mycoparasitism-related conditions, were determined from up to 13 different taxa and studied with regard to their evolutionary patterns. Two of them, chi18-13 and chi18-17, are members of the B1/B2 chitinase subgroup that have expanded significantly in paralog number in mycoparasitic Hypocrea atroviridis and H. virens. Chi18-13 contains two codons that evolve under positive selection and seven groups of co-evolving sites. Chi18-15 displays a unique codon-usage and contains five codons that evolve under positive selection and three groups of co-evolving sites. Regions of high amino acid variability are preferentially localized to substrate- or product side of the catalytic clefts. Differences in amino acid diversity/conservation patterns between different Trichoderma clades are observed. These observations show that Trichoderma chitinases chi18-13 and chi18-15 evolve in a manner consistent with rapid co-evolutionary interactions and identifies putative target regions involved in determining substrate-specificity. Libertas Academica 2010-03-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2865166/ /pubmed/20454524 Text en © 2010 by the authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This article is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Original Research
Ihrmark, Katarina
Asmail, Nashwan
Ubhayasekera, Wimal
Melin, Petter
Stenlid, Jan
Karlsson, Magnus
Comparative Molecular Evolution of Trichoderma Chitinases in Response to Mycoparasitic Interactions
title Comparative Molecular Evolution of Trichoderma Chitinases in Response to Mycoparasitic Interactions
title_full Comparative Molecular Evolution of Trichoderma Chitinases in Response to Mycoparasitic Interactions
title_fullStr Comparative Molecular Evolution of Trichoderma Chitinases in Response to Mycoparasitic Interactions
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Molecular Evolution of Trichoderma Chitinases in Response to Mycoparasitic Interactions
title_short Comparative Molecular Evolution of Trichoderma Chitinases in Response to Mycoparasitic Interactions
title_sort comparative molecular evolution of trichoderma chitinases in response to mycoparasitic interactions
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2865166/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20454524
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