Giant Starship Elements Mobilize Accessory Genes in Fungal Genomes

Author:

Gluck-Thaler Emile12ORCID,Ralston Timothy2,Konkel Zachary2,Ocampos Cristhian Grabowski3,Ganeshan Veena Devi4,Dorrance Anne E.5,Niblack Terry L.2,Wood Corlett W.1,Slot Jason C.2ORCID,Lopez-Nicora Horacio D.26,Vogan Aaron A.7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Pennsylvania Department of Biology, , Philadelphia, PA, USA

2. The Ohio State University Department of Plant Pathology, , Columbus, OH, USA

3. Universidad Nacional de Asunción Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias, , San Lorenzo, Paraguay

4. Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center, The Ohio State University , Columbus, OH, USA

5. The Ohio State University Department of Plant Pathology, , Wooster, OH, USA

6. Universidad San Carlos Departamento de Producción Agrícola, , Asunción, Paraguay

7. Systematic Biology, Department of Organismal Biology, University of Uppsala , Uppsala, Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Accessory genes are variably present among members of a species and are a reservoir of adaptive functions. In bacteria, differences in gene distributions among individuals largely result from mobile elements that acquire and disperse accessory genes as cargo. In contrast, the impact of cargo-carrying elements on eukaryotic evolution remains largely unknown. Here, we show that variation in genome content within multiple fungal species is facilitated by Starships, a newly discovered group of massive mobile elements that are 110 kb long on average, share conserved components, and carry diverse arrays of accessory genes. We identified hundreds of Starship-like regions across every major class of filamentous Ascomycetes, including 28 distinct Starships that range from 27 to 393 kb and last shared a common ancestor ca. 400 Ma. Using new long-read assemblies of the plant pathogen Macrophomina phaseolina, we characterize four additional Starships whose activities contribute to standing variation in genome structure and content. One of these elements, Voyager, inserts into 5S rDNA and contains a candidate virulence factor whose increasing copy number has contrasting associations with pathogenic and saprophytic growth, suggesting Voyager’s activity underlies an ecological trade-off. We propose that Starships are eukaryotic analogs of bacterial integrative and conjugative elements based on parallels between their conserved components and may therefore represent the first dedicated agents of active gene transfer in eukaryotes. Our results suggest that Starships have shaped the content and structure of fungal genomes for millions of years and reveal a new concerted route for evolution throughout an entire eukaryotic phylum.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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