4.6 Article

New Method for Identifying Fungal Kingdom Enzyme Hotspots from Genome Sequences

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 7, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof7030207

Keywords

taxonomic enzyme hotspots; eco-physiological enzyme hotspot; peptide-based functional annotation; CUPP; enzyme function specificity diversity; enzyme profiles

Funding

  1. European Commission H2020 Bio-based Industries Joint Consortium via the Macro Cascade Project, BBI [720755]
  2. MARIKAT JPI Cofund Blue BioEconomy Project [9082-00021B]
  3. Technical University of Denmark

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Fungal genome sequencing data can be utilized for enzyme discovery. A new approach using integrated function-family annotation of CAZymes has been developed to identify and quantify biomass-degrading capacity and diversity in fungal genomes. This analysis has identified potent hotspots of fungal biomass processing CAZymes, revealing insights into the evolution of fungal substrate-digestive profiles and expanding knowledge on biomass resource utilization.
Fungal genome sequencing data represent an enormous pool of information for enzyme discovery. Here, we report a new approach to identify and quantitatively compare biomass-degrading capacity and diversity of fungal genomes via integrated function-family annotation of carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes) encoded by the genomes. Based on analyses of 1932 fungal genomes the most potent hotspots of fungal biomass processing CAZymes are identified and ranked according to substrate degradation capacity. The analysis is achieved by a new bioinformatics approach, Conserved Unique Peptide Patterns (CUPP), providing for CAZyme-family annotation and robust prediction of molecular function followed by conversion of the CUPP output to lists of integrated Function;Family (e.g., EC 3.2.1.4;GH5) enzyme observations. An EC-function found in several protein families counts as different observations. Summing up such observations allows for ranking of all analyzed genome sequenced fungal species according to richness in CAZyme function diversity and degrading capacity. Identifying fungal CAZyme hotspots provides for identification of fungal species richest in cellulolytic, xylanolytic, pectinolytic, and lignin modifying enzymes. The fungal enzyme hotspots are found in fungi having very different lifestyle, ecology, physiology and substrate/host affinity. Surprisingly, most CAZyme hotspots are found in enzymatically understudied and unexploited species. In contrast, the most well-known fungal enzyme producers, from where many industrially exploited enzymes are derived, are ranking unexpectedly low. The results contribute to elucidating the evolution of fungal substrate-digestive CAZyme profiles, ecophysiology, and habitat adaptations, and expand the knowledge base for novel and improved biomass resource utilization.

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