4.7 Article

Cysteine-Rich Hydrophobin Gene Family: Genome Wide Analysis, Phylogeny and Transcript Profiling in Cordyceps militaris

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22020643

Keywords

Cordyceps militaris; hydrophobin; lifestyles; fruiting body development; light response; multi-domain hydrophobin

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31872163]
  2. Beijing Municipal Commission of Science and Technology [Z181100002418011]
  3. Guizhou Key Laboratory of Edible fungi breeding [[2019] 5105-2002]

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Hydrophobins are small secreted proteins exclusively found in fungi, and a genome-wide analysis of the hydrophobin family in Cordyceps militaris revealed a greater diversity among class II members and limited gene duplication. Different transcript patterns of four hydrophobin-encoding genes during the life cycle suggest potential varying functions. The discovery of multi-domain hydrophobins in C. militaris could provide valuable insights for further research on hydrophobins.
Hydrophobins are a family of small secreted proteins found exclusively in fungi, and they play various roles in the life cycle. In the present study, genome wide analysis and transcript profiling of the hydrophobin family in Cordyceps militaris, a well-known edible and medicinal mushroom, were studied. The distribution of hydrophobins in ascomycetes with different lifestyles showed that pathogenic fungi had significantly more hydrophobins than saprotrophic fungi, and class II members accounted for the majority. Phylogenetic analysis of hydrophobin proteins from the species of Cordyceps s.l. indicated that there was more variability among the class II members than class I. Only a few hydrophobin-encoding genes evolved by duplication in Cordyceps s.l., which was inconsistent with the important role of gene duplication in basidiomycetes. Different transcript patterns of four hydrophobin-encoding genes during the life cycle indicated the possible different functions for each. The transcripts of Cmhyd2, 3 and 4 can respond to light and were related with the photoreceptors. CmQHYD, with four hydrophobin II domains, was first found in C. militaris, and multi-domain hydrophobins were only distributed in the species of Cordycipitaceae and Clavicipitaceae. These results could be helpful for further function research of hydrophobins and could provide valuable information for the evolution of hydrophobins.

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