4.6 Article

Hallmarks of Basidiomycete Soft- and White-Rot in Wood-Decay -Omics Data of Two Armillaria Species

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9010149

Keywords

Armillaria wood-decay; basidiomycete soft-rot; plant biomass degradation; plant pathogens; proteomics; RNA-Seq; wood-decay types

Categories

Funding

  1. Hungarian National Research, Development, and Innovation Office [GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00052]
  2. Momentum program of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences [LP2019-13/2019]
  3. European Research Council [758161]
  4. competitive Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) Infrastructure award [12/RI/2346 (3)]
  5. European Research Council (ERC) [758161] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Wood-decaying Basidiomycetes play crucial roles in forest ecosystems, global carbon cycle, and bio-based industries. Recent studies have shown that certain Armillaria species exhibit atypical wood-decay gene combinations, resembling soft-rot fungi, with an enrichment of pectinases and expansins instead of traditional lignin-degrading enzymes. This observation suggests a conservation of ancestral soft-rot decay machinery across asco- and Basidiomycota.
Wood-decaying Basidiomycetes are among the most efficient degraders of plant cell walls, making them key players in forest ecosystems, global carbon cycle, and in bio-based industries. Recent insights from -omics data revealed a high functional diversity of wood-decay strategies, especially among the traditional white-rot and brown-rot dichotomy. We examined the mechanistic bases of wood-decay in the conifer-specialists Armillaria ostoyae and Armillaria cepistipes using transcriptomic and proteomic approaches. Armillaria spp. (Fungi, Basidiomycota) include devastating pathogens of temperate forests and saprotrophs that decay wood. They have been discussed as white-rot species, though their response to wood deviates from typical white-rotters. While we observed an upregulation of a diverse suite of plant cell wall degrading enzymes, unlike white-rotters, they possess and express an atypical wood-decay repertoire in which pectinases and expansins are enriched, whereas lignin-decaying enzymes (LDEs) are generally downregulated. This combination of wood decay genes resembles the soft-rot of Ascomycota and appears widespread among Basidiomycota that produce a superficial white rot-like decay. These observations are consistent with ancestral soft-rot decay machinery conserved across asco- and Basidiomycota, a gain of efficient lignin-degrading ability in white-rot fungi and repeated, complete, or partial losses of LDE encoding gene repertoires in brown- and secondarily soft-rot fungi.

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