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The lichen symbiosis re-viewed through the genomes of Cladonia grayi and its algal partner Asterochloris glomerata.pdf
BMC Genomics (2019)
  • Daniele Armaleo, Duke University
  • Olaf Müller, Duke University
  • François Lutzoni, Duke University
  • Ólafur S Andrésson, University of Iceland
  • Guillame Blanc, Aix Marseille University
  • Helge B Bode, Goethe University Frankfurt
  • Frank R Collart, University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Francesco Dal Grande, Goethe University Frankfurt
  • Fred Dietrich, Duke University Medical Center
  • Igor V. Grigoriev, US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute
  • Suzanne Joneson, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
  • Alan Kuo, US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute
  • Peter E Larsen, The University of Illinois at Chicago
  • John M. Logsdon, University of Iowa
  • David Lopez, Gilead Sciences, Inc.
  • Francis Martin, Université de Lorraine
  • Susan P May, Duke University
  • Tami McDonald, St. Catherine University
  • Sabeeha S. Merchant, University of California - Berkeley
  • Vivian Miao, University of British Columbia
  • Emmanuelle Morin, Université de Lorraine
  • Ryoko Oono, University of California - Santa Barbara
  • Matteo Pellegrini, University of California - Los Angeles
  • Nimrod Rubenstein, National Evolutionary Science Center
  • Maria Virginia Sanchez-Puerta Sanchez-Puerta, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo, Chacras de Coria, Argentina
  • Elizabeth Jennings Savelkoul, University of Iowa
  • Inke Schmitt, Goethe University Frankfurt
  • Jason C Slot, The Ohio State University
  • Darren Soanes, University of Exeter
  • Péter Szövényi, University of Zurich
  • Nicholas J Talbot, The Sainsbury Laboratory
  • Claire Veneault-Fourrey, Université de Lorraine
  • Basil Britto Xavier, University of Antwerp
Abstract
Background: Lichens, encompassing 20,000 known species, are symbioses between specialized fungi (mycobionts), mostly ascomycetes, and unicellular green algae or cyanobacteria (photobionts). Here we describe the first parallel genomic analysis of the mycobiont Cladonia grayi and of its green algal photobiont Asterochloris glomerata. We focus on genes/predicted proteins of potential symbiotic significance, sought by surveying proteins differentially activated during early stages of mycobiont and photobiont interaction in coculture, expanded or contracted protein families, and proteins with differential rates of evolution.

Results: A) In coculture, the fungus upregulated small secreted proteins, membrane transport proteins, signal transduction components, extracellular hydrolases and, notably, a ribitol transporter and an ammonium transporter, and the alga activated DNA metabolism, signal transduction, and expression of flagellar components. B) Expanded fungal protein families include heterokaryon incompatibility proteins, polyketide synthases, and a unique set of G-protein α subunit paralogs. Expanded algal protein families include carbohydrate active enzymes and a specific subclass of cytoplasmic carbonic anhydrases. The alga also appears to have acquired by horizontal gene transfer from prokaryotes novel archaeal ATPases and Desiccation-Related Proteins. Expanded in both symbionts are signal transduction components, ankyrin domain proteins and transcription factors involved in chromatin remodeling and stress responses. The fungal transportome is contracted, as are algal nitrate assimilation genes. C) In the mycobiont, slow-evolving proteins were enriched for components involved in protein translation, translocation and sorting.

Conclusions: The surveyed genes affect stress resistance, signaling, genome reprogramming, nutritional and structural interactions. The alga carries many genes likely transferred horizontally through viruses, yet we found no evidence of inter-symbiont gene transfer. The presence in the photobiont of meiosis-specific genes supports the notion that sexual reproduction occurs in Asterochloris while they are free-living, a phenomenon with implications for the adaptability of lichens and the persistent autonomy of the symbionts. The diversity of the genes affecting the symbiosis suggests that lichens evolved by accretion of many scattered regulatory and structural changes rather than through introduction of a few key innovations. This predicts that paths to lichenization were variable in different phyla, which is consistent with the emerging consensus that ascolichens could have had a few independent origins.
Keywords
  • Algal virus,
  • Co-culture,
  • Fungi,
  • Gene expression,
  • Gene family evolution,
  • Horizontal gene transfer,
  • Plant-fungal interactions,
  • Symbiosis genes,
  • Symbiont autonomy,
  • Lichen,
  • Green algae,
  • Cladonia,
  • Asterochloris,
  • Symbiosis,
  • Lecanoromycetes,
  • Genome,
  • Transcriptome
Publication Date
July 23, 2019
DOI
10.1186/s12864-019-5629-x
Citation Information
Daniele Armaleo, Olaf Müller, François Lutzoni, Ólafur S Andrésson, et al.. "The lichen symbiosis re-viewed through the genomes of Cladonia grayi and its algal partner Asterochloris glomerata.pdf" BMC Genomics Vol. 20 Iss. 1 (2019) ISSN: 1471-2164
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/tami-mcdonald/15/