3.9 Article

RNA silencing gene truncation in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans

Journal

EUKARYOTIC CELL
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages 339-349

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/EC.00355-07

Keywords

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Funding

  1. College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, Wisconsin Distinguished Graduate Fellowship
  2. National Research Initiative of the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service [2005-35201-15350]
  3. NSF [MCB-0236393]
  4. Universite Paris-Sud
  5. CNRS
  6. Institut Universitaire de France
  7. Ministere de l'Education Superieure et la Recherche (France)
  8. CONACYT (Mexico)

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The genus Aspergillus is ideally suited for the investigation of RNA silencing evolution because it includes species that have experienced a variety of RNA silencing gene changes. Our work on this subject begins here with the model species Aspergillus nidulans. Filamentous ascomycete fungi generally each encode two of the core RNA silencing proteins, Dicer and Argonaute, but A. nidulans appears to have lost one of each to gene truncation events. Although a role in growth, development, or RNA silencing was not detected for the truncated genes, they do produce spliced and poly(A)-tailed transcripts, suggesting that they may have an undetermined biological function. Population analysis demonstrates that the truncated genes are fixed at the species level and that their full-length orthologs in a closely related species are also unstable. With these gene truncation events, A. nidulans encodes only a single intact Dicer and Argonaute. Their deletion results in morphologically and reproductively normal strains that are incapable of experimental RNA silencing. Thus, our results suggest that the remaining A. nidulans RNA silencing genes have a nonhousekeeping function, such as defense against viruses and transposons.

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