Gene Regulation Shifts Shed Light on Fungal Adaption in Plant Biomass Decomposers

Author:

Zhang Jiwei12,Silverstein Kevin A. T.3,Castaño Jesus David12,Figueroa Melania45,Schilling Jonathan S.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA

2. Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems Engineering, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA

3. Minnesota Supercomputing Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA

4. Department of Plant Pathology, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA

5. CSIRO Agriculture and Food, Canberra, Australia

Abstract

Fungi dominate the turnover of wood, Earth’s largest pool of aboveground terrestrial carbon. Fungi first evolved this capacity by degrading lignin to access and hydrolyze embedded carbohydrates (white rot). Multiple lineages, however, adapted faster reactive oxygen species (ROS) pretreatments to loosen lignocellulose and selectively extract sugars (brown rot). This brown rot “shortcut” often coincided with losses (>60%) of conventional lignocellulolytic genes, implying that ROS adaptations supplanted conventional pathways. We used comparative transcriptomics to further pursue brown rot adaptations, which illuminated the clear temporal expression shift of ROS genes, as well as the shift toward synthesizing more GHs in brown rot relative to white rot. These imply that gene regulatory shifts, not simply ROS innovations, were key to brown rot fungal evolution. These results not only reveal an important biological shift among these unique fungi, but they may also illuminate a trait that restricts brown rot fungi to certain ecological niches.

Funder

U.S. Department of Agriculture

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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