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In Silico Characterization and Molecular Evolutionary Analysis of a Novel Superfamily of Fungal Effector Proteins
- Source :
- Molecular Biology and Evolution, 29(11), 3371-3384, Molecular Biology and Evolution 29 (2012) 11
- Publication Year :
- 2012
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press (OUP), 2012.
-
Abstract
- 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.
- Subjects :
- mixed models
Genetic Speciation
In silico
Molecular Sequence Data
Biology
phylogeny
Genome
Evolution, Molecular
Fungal Proteins
Species Specificity
Phylogenetics
functional divergence
Gene duplication
Genetics
Amino Acid Sequence
amino-acid sites
Molecular Biology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Glycoside hydrolase family 18
Models, Genetic
EPS-2
Effector
Fungi
gene duplication
Computational Biology
death process
Molecular Sequence Annotation
multigene families
Biosystematiek
Protein Structure, Tertiary
Laboratorium voor Phytopathologie
Multigene Family
GenBank
Laboratory of Phytopathology
Biosystematics
maximum-likelihood
cladosporium-fulvum
Genome, Fungal
kluyveromyces-lactis
Functional divergence
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15371719 and 07374038
- Volume :
- 29
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Molecular Biology and Evolution
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2697e6bce3f4ffe77e8ed4b6874a3964