Comparative genomics and prediction of conditionally dispensable sequences in legume–infecting Fusarium oxysporum formae speciales facilitates identification of candidate effectors

Background: Soil-borne fungi of the Fusarium oxysporum species complex cause devastating wilt disease on many crops including legumes that supply human dietary protein needs across many parts of the globe. We present and compare draft genome assemblies for three legume-infecting formae speciales (ff...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Williams, A., Sharma, M., Thatcher, L., Azam, S., Hane, James, Sperschneider, J., Kidd, B., Anderson, J., Ghosh, R., Garg, G., Lichtenzveig, J., Kistler, H., Shea, T., Young, S., Buck, S., Kamphuis, L., Saxena, R., Pande, S., Ma, L., Varshney, R., Singh, K.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47903
_version_ 1848757962237018112
author Williams, A.
Sharma, M.
Thatcher, L.
Azam, S.
Hane, James
Sperschneider, J.
Kidd, B.
Anderson, J.
Ghosh, R.
Garg, G.
Lichtenzveig, J.
Kistler, H.
Shea, T.
Young, S.
Buck, S.
Kamphuis, L.
Saxena, R.
Pande, S.
Ma, L.
Varshney, R.
Singh, K.
author_facet Williams, A.
Sharma, M.
Thatcher, L.
Azam, S.
Hane, James
Sperschneider, J.
Kidd, B.
Anderson, J.
Ghosh, R.
Garg, G.
Lichtenzveig, J.
Kistler, H.
Shea, T.
Young, S.
Buck, S.
Kamphuis, L.
Saxena, R.
Pande, S.
Ma, L.
Varshney, R.
Singh, K.
author_sort Williams, A.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: Soil-borne fungi of the Fusarium oxysporum species complex cause devastating wilt disease on many crops including legumes that supply human dietary protein needs across many parts of the globe. We present and compare draft genome assemblies for three legume-infecting formae speciales (ff. spp.): F. oxysporum f. sp. ciceris (Foc-38-1) and f. sp. pisi (Fop-37622), significant pathogens of chickpea and pea respectively, the world’s second and third most important grain legumes, and lastly f. sp. medicaginis (Fom-5190a) for which we developed a model legume pathosystem utilising Medicago truncatula. Results: Focusing on the identification of pathogenicity gene content, we leveraged the reference genomes of Fusarium pathogens F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici (tomato-infecting) and F. solani (pea-infecting) and their well-characterised core and dispensable chromosomes to predict genomic organisation in the newly sequenced legume-infecting isolates. Dispensable chromosomes are not essential for growth and in Fusarium species are known to be enriched in host-specificity and pathogenicity-associated genes. Comparative genomics of the publicly available Fusarium species revealed differential patterns of sequence conservation across F. oxysporum formae speciales, with legume-pathogenic formae speciales not exhibiting greater sequence conservation between them relative to non-legume-infecting formae speciales, possibly indicating the lack of a common ancestral source for legume pathogenicity. Combining predicted dispensable gene content with in planta expression in the model legume-infecting isolate, we identified small conserved regions and candidate effectors, four of which shared greatest similarity to proteins from another legume-infecting ff. spp. Conclusions: We demonstrate that distinction of core and potential dispensable genomic regions of novel F. oxysporum genomes is an effective tool to facilitate effector discovery and the identification of gene content possibly linked to host specificity. While the legume-infecting isolates didn’t share large genomic regions of pathogenicity-related content, smaller regions and candidate effector proteins were highly conserved, suggesting that they may play specific roles in inducing disease on legume hosts.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:36:25Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-47903
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:36:25Z
publishDate 2016
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-479032017-09-13T14:19:01Z Comparative genomics and prediction of conditionally dispensable sequences in legume–infecting Fusarium oxysporum formae speciales facilitates identification of candidate effectors Williams, A. Sharma, M. Thatcher, L. Azam, S. Hane, James Sperschneider, J. Kidd, B. Anderson, J. Ghosh, R. Garg, G. Lichtenzveig, J. Kistler, H. Shea, T. Young, S. Buck, S. Kamphuis, L. Saxena, R. Pande, S. Ma, L. Varshney, R. Singh, K. Background: Soil-borne fungi of the Fusarium oxysporum species complex cause devastating wilt disease on many crops including legumes that supply human dietary protein needs across many parts of the globe. We present and compare draft genome assemblies for three legume-infecting formae speciales (ff. spp.): F. oxysporum f. sp. ciceris (Foc-38-1) and f. sp. pisi (Fop-37622), significant pathogens of chickpea and pea respectively, the world’s second and third most important grain legumes, and lastly f. sp. medicaginis (Fom-5190a) for which we developed a model legume pathosystem utilising Medicago truncatula. Results: Focusing on the identification of pathogenicity gene content, we leveraged the reference genomes of Fusarium pathogens F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici (tomato-infecting) and F. solani (pea-infecting) and their well-characterised core and dispensable chromosomes to predict genomic organisation in the newly sequenced legume-infecting isolates. Dispensable chromosomes are not essential for growth and in Fusarium species are known to be enriched in host-specificity and pathogenicity-associated genes. Comparative genomics of the publicly available Fusarium species revealed differential patterns of sequence conservation across F. oxysporum formae speciales, with legume-pathogenic formae speciales not exhibiting greater sequence conservation between them relative to non-legume-infecting formae speciales, possibly indicating the lack of a common ancestral source for legume pathogenicity. Combining predicted dispensable gene content with in planta expression in the model legume-infecting isolate, we identified small conserved regions and candidate effectors, four of which shared greatest similarity to proteins from another legume-infecting ff. spp. Conclusions: We demonstrate that distinction of core and potential dispensable genomic regions of novel F. oxysporum genomes is an effective tool to facilitate effector discovery and the identification of gene content possibly linked to host specificity. While the legume-infecting isolates didn’t share large genomic regions of pathogenicity-related content, smaller regions and candidate effector proteins were highly conserved, suggesting that they may play specific roles in inducing disease on legume hosts. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47903 10.1186/s12864-016-2486-8 fulltext
spellingShingle Williams, A.
Sharma, M.
Thatcher, L.
Azam, S.
Hane, James
Sperschneider, J.
Kidd, B.
Anderson, J.
Ghosh, R.
Garg, G.
Lichtenzveig, J.
Kistler, H.
Shea, T.
Young, S.
Buck, S.
Kamphuis, L.
Saxena, R.
Pande, S.
Ma, L.
Varshney, R.
Singh, K.
Comparative genomics and prediction of conditionally dispensable sequences in legume–infecting Fusarium oxysporum formae speciales facilitates identification of candidate effectors
title Comparative genomics and prediction of conditionally dispensable sequences in legume–infecting Fusarium oxysporum formae speciales facilitates identification of candidate effectors
title_full Comparative genomics and prediction of conditionally dispensable sequences in legume–infecting Fusarium oxysporum formae speciales facilitates identification of candidate effectors
title_fullStr Comparative genomics and prediction of conditionally dispensable sequences in legume–infecting Fusarium oxysporum formae speciales facilitates identification of candidate effectors
title_full_unstemmed Comparative genomics and prediction of conditionally dispensable sequences in legume–infecting Fusarium oxysporum formae speciales facilitates identification of candidate effectors
title_short Comparative genomics and prediction of conditionally dispensable sequences in legume–infecting Fusarium oxysporum formae speciales facilitates identification of candidate effectors
title_sort comparative genomics and prediction of conditionally dispensable sequences in legume–infecting fusarium oxysporum formae speciales facilitates identification of candidate effectors
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47903