Trichoderma Research in the Genome Era

Author:

Mukherjee Prasun K.1,Horwitz Benjamin A.2,Herrera-Estrella Alfredo3,Schmoll Monika4,Kenerley Charles M.5

Affiliation:

1. Nuclear Agriculture and Biotechnology Division, Bhabha Atomic Research Center, Trombay, Mumbai 400085, India;

2. Department of Biology, Technion—Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 32000, Israel;

3. Laboratorio Nacional de Genomica para la Biodiversidad, Centro de Investigacion y de Estudios Avanzados del IPN Sede Irapuato, Irapuato 36821, Guanajuato, Mexico;

4. Austrian Institute of Technology, Health and Environment Department, Bioresources, University and Research Center, UFT Campus Tulln, Tulln/Donau, 3430 Austria;

5. Department of Plant Pathology & Microbiology, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843;

Abstract

Trichoderma species are widely used in agriculture and industry as biopesticides and sources of enzymes, respectively. These fungi reproduce asexually by production of conidia and chlamydospores and in wild habitats by ascospores. Trichoderma species are efficient mycoparasites and prolific producers of secondary metabolites, some of which have clinical importance. However, the ecological or biological significance of this metabolite diversity is sorely lagging behind the chemical significance. Many strains produce elicitors and induce resistance in plants through colonization of roots. Seven species have now been sequenced. Comparison of a primarily saprophytic species with two mycoparasitic species has provided striking contrasts and has established that mycoparasitism is an ancestral trait of this genus. Among the interesting outcomes of genome comparison is the discovery of a vast repertoire of secondary metabolism pathways and of numerous small cysteine-rich secreted proteins. Genomics has also facilitated investigation of sexual crossing in Trichoderma reesei, suggesting the possibility of strain improvement through hybridization.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Plant Science

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