Affiliation:
1. Division of Plant Pathology and Microbiology, Department of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
2. Valley Fever Center for Excellence, Tucson, Arizona
3. Graduate Interdisciplinary Program in Genetics
4. Bio5 Institute
5. Division of Plant Biology, Department of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Coccidioides
species, the fungi responsible for the valley fever disease, are known to reproduce asexually through the production of arthroconidia that are the infectious propagules. The possible role of sexual reproduction in the survival and dispersal of these pathogens is unexplored. To determine the potential for mating of
Coccidioides
, we analyzed genome sequences and identified mating type loci characteristic of heterothallic ascomycetes.
Coccidioides
strains contain either a
MAT1-1
or a
MAT1-2
idiomorph, which is 8.1 or 9 kb in length, respectively, the longest reported for any ascomycete species. These idiomorphs contain four or five genes, respectively, more than are present in the
MAT
loci of most ascomycetes. Along with their cDNA structures, we determined that all genes in the
MAT
loci are transcribed. Two genes frequently found in common sequences flanking
MAT
idiomorphs,
APN2
and
COX13
, are within the
MAT
loci in
Coccidioides
, but the
MAT1-1
and
MAT1-2
copies have diverged dramatically from each other. Data indicate that the acquisition of these genes in the
MAT
loci occurred prior to the separation of
Coccidioides
from
Uncinocarpus reesii
. An analysis of 436
Coccidioides
isolates from patients and the environment indicates that in both
Coccidioides immitis
and
C. posadasii
, there is a 1:1 distribution of
MAT
loci, as would be expected for sexually reproducing species. In addition, an analysis of isolates obtained from 11 soil samples demonstrated that at three sampling sites, strains of both mating types were present, indicating that compatible strains were in close proximity in the environment.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
77 articles.
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