4.7 Article

Comparative Genomics of Eight Fusarium graminearum Strains with Contrasting Aggressiveness Reveals an Expanded Open Pangenome and Extended Effector Content Signatures

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22126257

Keywords

Fusarium graminearum; Fusarium head blight; pangenome; secreted protein clusters; proteinaceous effectors; aggressiveness; intra-species genomic diversity

Funding

  1. Agence Nationale de la Recherche of the French government [ANR-15-CE21-0010, 16-IDEX-0001 CAP 20-25]
  2. US NSF [MCB1818006, CH1808717]

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This study sequenced the genomes of eight European Fusarium graminearum strains with varying levels of aggressiveness, revealing intra-species diversity and potential determinants of aggressiveness in the pathogen. The analysis outlined a reference pangenome expanding the known gene repertoire by 32%, highlighted over 1000 genes under diverse selection, and described 900 secreted protein clusters which may play key roles in infection dynamics.
Fusarium graminearum, the primary cause of Fusarium head blight (FHB) in small-grain cereals, demonstrates remarkably variable levels of aggressiveness in its host, producing different infection dynamics and contrasted symptom severity. While the secreted proteins, including effectors, are thought to be one of the essential components of aggressiveness, our knowledge of the intra-species genomic diversity of F. graminearum is still limited. In this work, we sequenced eight European F. graminearum strains of contrasting aggressiveness to characterize their respective genome structure, their gene content and to delineate their specificities. By combining the available sequences of 12 other F. graminearum strains, we outlined a reference pangenome that expands the repertoire of the known genes in the reference PH-1 genome by 32%, including nearly 21,000 non-redundant sequences and gathering a common base of 9250 conserved core-genes. More than 1000 genes with high non-synonymous mutation rates may be under diverse selection, especially regarding the trichothecene biosynthesis gene cluster. About 900 secreted protein clusters (SPCs) have been described. Mostly localized in the fast sub-genome of F. graminearum supposed to evolve rapidly to promote adaptation and rapid responses to the host's infection, these SPCs gather a range of putative proteinaceous effectors systematically found in the core secretome, with the chloroplast and the plant nucleus as the main predicted targets in the host cell. This work describes new knowledge on the intra-species diversity in F. graminearum and emphasizes putative determinants of aggressiveness, providing a wealth of new candidate genes potentially involved in the Fusarium head blight disease.

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