Affiliation:
1. Centro de Recursos Microbiológicos (CREM), Departamento de Ciências da Vida, Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Caparica, Portugal
2. Institute of Microbiology, Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
3. Vital-IT Group, SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Pneumocystis
species are fungal parasites of mammal lungs showing host specificity.
Pneumocystis jirovecii
colonizes humans and causes severe pneumonia in immunosuppressed individuals. In the absence of
in vitro
cultures, the life cycle of these fungi remains poorly known. Sexual reproduction probably occurs, but the system of this process and the mating type (
MAT
) genes involved are not characterized. In the present study, we used comparative genomics to investigate the issue in P. jirovecii and
Pneumocystis carinii
, the species infecting rats, as well as in their relative Taphrina deformans. We searched sex-related genes using 103 sequences from the relative
Schizosaccharomyces pombe
as queries. Genes homologous to several sex-related role categories were identified in all species investigated, further supporting sexuality in these organisms. Extensive
in silico
searches identified only three putative
MAT
genes in each species investigated (
matMc
,
matMi
, and
matPi
). In P. jirovecii, these genes clustered on the same contig, proving their contiguity in the genome. This organization seems compatible neither with heterothallism, because two different
MAT
loci on separate DNA molecules would have been detected, nor with secondary homothallism, because the latter involves generally more
MAT
genes. Consistently, we did not detect
cis
-acting sequences for mating type switching in secondary homothallism, and PCR revealed identical
MAT
genes in P. jirovecii isolates from six patients. A strong synteny of the genomic region surrounding the putative
MAT
genes exists between the two Pneumocystis species. Our results suggest the hypothesis that primary homothallism is the system of reproduction of Pneumocystis species and T. deformans.
IMPORTANCE
Sexual reproduction among fungi can involve a single partner (homothallism) or two compatible partners (heterothallism). We investigated the issue in three pathogenic fungal relatives:
Pneumocystis jirovecii
, which causes severe pneumonia in immunocompromised humans;
Pneumocystis carinii
, which infects rats; and the plant pathogen Taphrina deformans. The nature, the number, and the organization within the genome of the genes involved in sexual reproduction were determined. The three species appeared to harbor a single genomic region gathering only three genes involved in sexual differentiation, an organization which is compatible with sexual reproduction involving a single partner. These findings illuminate the strategy adopted by fungal pathogens to infect their hosts.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
42 articles.
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