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Fungal genome and mating system transitions facilitated by chromosomal translocations involving intercentromeric recombination

Species within the human pathogenic Cryptococcus species complex are major threats to public health, causing approximately 1 million annual infections globally. Cryptococcus amylolentus is the most closely known related species of the pathogenic Cryptococcus species complex, and it is non-pathogenic...

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Autores principales: Sun, Sheng, Yadav, Vikas, Billmyre, R. Blake, Cuomo, Christina A., Nowrousian, Minou, Wang, Liuyang, Souciet, Jean-Luc, Boekhout, Teun, Porcel, Betina, Wincker, Patrick, Granek, Joshua A., Sanyal, Kaustuv, Heitman, Joseph
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5568439/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28800596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.2002527
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author Sun, Sheng
Yadav, Vikas
Billmyre, R. Blake
Cuomo, Christina A.
Nowrousian, Minou
Wang, Liuyang
Souciet, Jean-Luc
Boekhout, Teun
Porcel, Betina
Wincker, Patrick
Granek, Joshua A.
Sanyal, Kaustuv
Heitman, Joseph
author_facet Sun, Sheng
Yadav, Vikas
Billmyre, R. Blake
Cuomo, Christina A.
Nowrousian, Minou
Wang, Liuyang
Souciet, Jean-Luc
Boekhout, Teun
Porcel, Betina
Wincker, Patrick
Granek, Joshua A.
Sanyal, Kaustuv
Heitman, Joseph
author_sort Sun, Sheng
collection PubMed
description Species within the human pathogenic Cryptococcus species complex are major threats to public health, causing approximately 1 million annual infections globally. Cryptococcus amylolentus is the most closely known related species of the pathogenic Cryptococcus species complex, and it is non-pathogenic. Additionally, while pathogenic Cryptococcus species have bipolar mating systems with a single large mating type (MAT) locus that represents a derived state in Basidiomycetes, C. amylolentus has a tetrapolar mating system with 2 MAT loci (P/R and HD) located on different chromosomes. Thus, studying C. amylolentus will shed light on the transition from tetrapolar to bipolar mating systems in the pathogenic Cryptococcus species, as well as its possible link with the origin and evolution of pathogenesis. In this study, we sequenced, assembled, and annotated the genomes of 2 C. amylolentus isolates, CBS6039 and CBS6273, which are sexual and interfertile. Genome comparison between the 2 C. amylolentus isolates identified the boundaries and the complete gene contents of the P/R and HD MAT loci. Bioinformatic and chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) analyses revealed that, similar to those of the pathogenic Cryptococcus species, C. amylolentus has regional centromeres (CENs) that are enriched with species-specific transposable and repetitive DNA elements. Additionally, we found that while neither the P/R nor the HD locus is physically closely linked to its centromere in C. amylolentus, and the regions between the MAT loci and their respective centromeres show overall synteny between the 2 genomes, both MAT loci exhibit genetic linkage to their respective centromere during meiosis, suggesting the presence of recombinational suppressors and/or epistatic gene interactions in the MAT-CEN intervening regions. Furthermore, genomic comparisons between C. amylolentus and related pathogenic Cryptococcus species provide evidence that multiple chromosomal rearrangements mediated by intercentromeric recombination have occurred during descent of the 2 lineages from their common ancestor. Taken together, our findings support a model in which the evolution of the bipolar mating system was initiated by an ectopic recombination event mediated by similar repetitive centromeric DNA elements shared between chromosomes. This translocation brought the P/R and HD loci onto the same chromosome, and further chromosomal rearrangements then resulted in the 2 MAT loci becoming physically linked and eventually fusing to form the single contiguous MAT locus that is now extant in the pathogenic Cryptococcus species.
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spelling pubmed-55684392017-09-09 Fungal genome and mating system transitions facilitated by chromosomal translocations involving intercentromeric recombination Sun, Sheng Yadav, Vikas Billmyre, R. Blake Cuomo, Christina A. Nowrousian, Minou Wang, Liuyang Souciet, Jean-Luc Boekhout, Teun Porcel, Betina Wincker, Patrick Granek, Joshua A. Sanyal, Kaustuv Heitman, Joseph PLoS Biol Research Article Species within the human pathogenic Cryptococcus species complex are major threats to public health, causing approximately 1 million annual infections globally. Cryptococcus amylolentus is the most closely known related species of the pathogenic Cryptococcus species complex, and it is non-pathogenic. Additionally, while pathogenic Cryptococcus species have bipolar mating systems with a single large mating type (MAT) locus that represents a derived state in Basidiomycetes, C. amylolentus has a tetrapolar mating system with 2 MAT loci (P/R and HD) located on different chromosomes. Thus, studying C. amylolentus will shed light on the transition from tetrapolar to bipolar mating systems in the pathogenic Cryptococcus species, as well as its possible link with the origin and evolution of pathogenesis. In this study, we sequenced, assembled, and annotated the genomes of 2 C. amylolentus isolates, CBS6039 and CBS6273, which are sexual and interfertile. Genome comparison between the 2 C. amylolentus isolates identified the boundaries and the complete gene contents of the P/R and HD MAT loci. Bioinformatic and chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) analyses revealed that, similar to those of the pathogenic Cryptococcus species, C. amylolentus has regional centromeres (CENs) that are enriched with species-specific transposable and repetitive DNA elements. Additionally, we found that while neither the P/R nor the HD locus is physically closely linked to its centromere in C. amylolentus, and the regions between the MAT loci and their respective centromeres show overall synteny between the 2 genomes, both MAT loci exhibit genetic linkage to their respective centromere during meiosis, suggesting the presence of recombinational suppressors and/or epistatic gene interactions in the MAT-CEN intervening regions. Furthermore, genomic comparisons between C. amylolentus and related pathogenic Cryptococcus species provide evidence that multiple chromosomal rearrangements mediated by intercentromeric recombination have occurred during descent of the 2 lineages from their common ancestor. Taken together, our findings support a model in which the evolution of the bipolar mating system was initiated by an ectopic recombination event mediated by similar repetitive centromeric DNA elements shared between chromosomes. This translocation brought the P/R and HD loci onto the same chromosome, and further chromosomal rearrangements then resulted in the 2 MAT loci becoming physically linked and eventually fusing to form the single contiguous MAT locus that is now extant in the pathogenic Cryptococcus species. Public Library of Science 2017-08-11 /pmc/articles/PMC5568439/ /pubmed/28800596 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.2002527 Text en © 2017 Sun et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sun, Sheng
Yadav, Vikas
Billmyre, R. Blake
Cuomo, Christina A.
Nowrousian, Minou
Wang, Liuyang
Souciet, Jean-Luc
Boekhout, Teun
Porcel, Betina
Wincker, Patrick
Granek, Joshua A.
Sanyal, Kaustuv
Heitman, Joseph
Fungal genome and mating system transitions facilitated by chromosomal translocations involving intercentromeric recombination
title Fungal genome and mating system transitions facilitated by chromosomal translocations involving intercentromeric recombination
title_full Fungal genome and mating system transitions facilitated by chromosomal translocations involving intercentromeric recombination
title_fullStr Fungal genome and mating system transitions facilitated by chromosomal translocations involving intercentromeric recombination
title_full_unstemmed Fungal genome and mating system transitions facilitated by chromosomal translocations involving intercentromeric recombination
title_short Fungal genome and mating system transitions facilitated by chromosomal translocations involving intercentromeric recombination
title_sort fungal genome and mating system transitions facilitated by chromosomal translocations involving intercentromeric recombination
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5568439/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28800596
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.2002527
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