1. Pathogenic Allodiploid Hybrids of Aspergillus Fungi
- Author
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Gustavo H. Goldman, Fausto Almeida, Sonja L. Knowles, Rafael Wesley Bastos, Laure Nicolas Annick Ries, Antonis Rokas, Nicholas H. Oberlies, Lilian Pereira Silva, Abigail L. Lind, Thaila Fernanda dos Reis, Jacob L. Steenwyk, Fernando Rodrigues, Huzefa A. Raja, André Moreira Pessoni, Thais Fernanda de Campos Fraga da Silva, Vania L. D. Bonato, and Katrien Lagrou
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Genetics ,Aspergillus ,Species complex ,biology ,Ascomycota ,Virulence ,Genomics ,biology.organism_classification ,Diploidy ,Phenotype ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Eurotiomycetes ,Aspergillus nidulans ,Hybridization, Genetic ,Genome, Fungal ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Hybrid - Abstract
Summary Interspecific hybridization substantially alters genotypes and phenotypes and can give rise to new lineages. Hybrid isolates that differ from their parental species in infection-relevant traits have been observed in several human-pathogenic yeasts and plant-pathogenic filamentous fungi but have yet to be found in human-pathogenic filamentous fungi. We discovered 6 clinical isolates from patients with aspergillosis originally identified as Aspergillus nidulans (section Nidulantes) that are actually allodiploid hybrids formed by the fusion of Aspergillus spinulosporus with an unknown close relative of Aspergillus quadrilineatus, both in section Nidulantes. Evolutionary genomic analyses revealed that these isolates belong to Aspergillus latus, an allodiploid hybrid species. Characterization of diverse infection-relevant traits further showed that A. latus hybrid isolates are genomically and phenotypically heterogeneous but also differ from A. nidulans, A. spinulosporus, and A. quadrilineatus. These results suggest that allodiploid hybridization contributes to the genomic and phenotypic diversity of filamentous fungal pathogens of humans.
- Published
- 2020