Department of Plant Pathology, University of California Davis.
Mol Biol Evol. 2012 Nov;29(11):3371-84. doi: 10.1093/molbev/mss143. Epub 2012 May 23.
Most fungal plant pathogens secrete effector proteins during pathogenesis to manipulate their host's defense and promote disease. These are so highly diverse in sequence and distribution, they are essentially considered as species-specific. However, we have recently shown the presence of homologous effectors in fungal species of the Dothideomycetes class. One such example is Ecp2, an effector originally described in the tomato pathogen Cladosporium fulvum but later detected in the plant pathogenic fungi Mycosphaerella fijiensis and Mycosphaerella graminicola as well. Here, using in silico sequence-similarity searches against a database of 135 fungal genomes and GenBank, we extend our queries for homologs of Ecp2 to the fungal kingdom and beyond, and further study their history of diversification. Our analyses show that Ecp2 homologs are members of an ancient and widely distributed superfamily of putative fungal effectors, which we term Hce2 for Homologs of C. fulvum Ecp2. Molecular evolutionary analyses show that the superfamily originated and diversified within the fungal kingdom, experiencing multiple lineage-specific expansions and losses that are consistent with the birth-and-death model of gene family evolution. Newly formed paralogs appear to be subject to diversification early after gene duplication events, whereas at later stages purifying selection acts to preserve diversity and the newly evolved putative functions. Some members of the Hce2 superfamily are fused to fungal Glycoside Hydrolase family 18 chitinases that show high similarity to the Zymocin killer toxin from the dairy yeast Kluyveromyces lactis, suggesting an analogous role in antagonistic interactions. The observed high rates of gene duplication and loss in the Hce2 superfamily, combined with diversification in both sequence and possibly functions within and between species, suggest that Hce2s are involved in adaptation to stresses and new ecological niches. Such findings address the need to rationalize effector biology and evolution beyond the perspective of solely host-microbe interactions.
大多数真菌植物病原体在发病过程中会分泌效应蛋白来操纵宿主的防御系统并促进疾病的发生。这些效应蛋白在序列和分布上高度多样化,因此基本上被认为是种特异性的。然而,我们最近在丛梗孢目真菌物种中发现了同源效应物。其中一个例子是 Ecp2,它最初是在番茄病原体棒孢叶点霉中被描述的,但后来在植物病原菌梨孢拟盘多毛孢和禾谷球腔菌中也被检测到。在这里,我们使用针对 135 个真菌基因组和 GenBank 数据库的基于序列相似性的计算机搜索,将 Ecp2 的同源物查询扩展到真菌界甚至更远的范围,并进一步研究它们的多样化历史。我们的分析表明,Ecp2 同源物是一个古老且广泛分布的假定真菌效应物超家族的成员,我们将其命名为 Hce2,即 Cladosporium fulvum Ecp2 的同源物。分子进化分析表明,该超家族起源于真菌界并在此多样化,经历了多次谱系特异性扩张和丢失,这与基因家族进化的“诞生-死亡”模型一致。新形成的旁系同源物似乎在基因复制事件后很快就会发生多样化,而在后期,纯化选择则起到了保持多样性和新进化的假定功能的作用。Hce2 超家族的一些成员与真菌糖苷水解酶家族 18 几丁质酶融合,与乳酵母 Kluyveromyces lactis 的 Zymocin 杀伤毒素高度相似,表明在拮抗相互作用中具有类似的作用。Hce2 超家族中观察到的高基因复制和丢失率,以及在序列和功能上的多样性,无论是在种内还是种间,都表明 Hce2 参与了对压力和新生态位的适应。这些发现满足了超越宿主-微生物相互作用的视角来合理化效应物生物学和进化的需求。