The Aphelenchoides genomes reveal substantial horizontal gene transfers in the last common ancestor of free‐living and major plant‐parasitic nematodes

Author:

Lai Cheng‐Kuo12ORCID,Lee Yi‐Chien134ORCID,Ke Huei‐Mien5ORCID,Lu Min R.1ORCID,Liu Wei‐An1ORCID,Lee Hsin‐Han1ORCID,Liu Yu‐Ching1ORCID,Yoshiga Toyoshi6ORCID,Kikuchi Taisei7ORCID,Chen Peichen J.8ORCID,Tsai Isheng Jason1234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biodiversity Research Center Academia Sinica Taipei Taiwan

2. Genome and Systems Biology Degree Program National Taiwan University and Academia Sinica Taipei Taiwan

3. Biodiversity Program, Taiwan International Graduate Program Academia Sinica and National Taiwan Normal University Taipei Taiwan

4. Department of Life Science National Taiwan Normal University Taipei Taiwan

5. Department of Microbiology Soochow University Taipei Taiwan

6. Faculty of Agriculture Saga University Saga Japan

7. Department of Integrated Biosciences, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences The University of Tokyo Chiba Japan

8. Department of Plant Pathology National Chung Hsing University Taichung Taiwan

Abstract

AbstractAphelenchoides besseyi is a plant‐parasitic nematode (PPN) in the family Aphelenchoididae capable of infecting more than 200 plant species. A. besseyi is also a species complex with strains exhibiting varying pathogenicity to plants. We present the genome and annotations of six Aphelenchoides species, four of which belonged to the A. besseyi species complex. Most Aphelenchoides genomes have a size of 44.7–47.4 Mb and are among the smallest in clade IV, with the exception of A. fujianensis, which has a size of 143.8 Mb and is one of the largest. Phylogenomic analysis successfully delimited the species complex into A. oryzae and A. pseudobesseyi and revealed a reduction of transposon elements in the last common ancestor of Aphelenchoides. Synteny analyses between reference genomes indicated that three chromosomes in A. besseyi were derived from fission and fusion events. A systematic identification of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) genes across 27 representative nematodes allowed us to identify two major episodes of acquisition corresponding to the last common ancestor of clade IV or major PPNs, respectively. These genes were mostly lost and differentially retained between clades or strains. Most HGT events were acquired from bacteria, followed by fungi, and also from plants; plant HGT was especially prevalent in Bursaphelenchus mucronatus. Our results comprehensively improve the understanding of HGT in nematodes.

Funder

Academia Sinica

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Biotechnology

Reference99 articles.

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