Abstract

Amanita molliuscula is a basal species of lethal Amanita and intrigues the field because it does not produce discernable α-amanitin when inspected by High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC), which sets it apart from all known amanitin-producing (lethal) Amanita species. In order to study the underlining genetic basis of the phenotype, we sequenced this species through PacBio and Illumina RNA-Seq platforms. In total, 17 genes of the “MSDIN” family (named after the first five amino acid residues of the precursor peptides) were found in the genome and 11 of them were expressed at the transcription level. The expression pattern was not even but in a differential fashion: two of the MSDINs were highly expressed (FPKM value > 100), while the majority were expressed at low levels (FPKM value < 1). Prolyl oligopeptidease B (POPB) is the key enzyme in the amanitin biosynthetic pathway, and high expression of this enzyme was also discovered (FPKM value > 100). The two MSDINs with highest transcription further translated into two novel cyclic peptides, the structure of which is distinctive from all known cyclic peptides. The result illustrates the correlation between the expression and the final peptide products. In contrast to previous HPLC result, the genome of A. molliuscula harbors α-amanitin genes (three copies), but the product was in trace amount indicated by MS. Overall, transcription of MSDINs encoding major toxins (α-amanitin, β-amanitin, phallacidin and phalloidin) were low, showing that these toxins were not actively synthesized at the stage. Collectively, our results indicate that the amanitin biosynthetic pathway is highly active at the mature fruiting body stage in A. molliuscula, and due to the differential expression of MSDIN genes, the pathway produces only a few cyclic peptides at the time.

Highlights

  • The biosynthesis of amatoxins is mainly completed by two important groups of genes: those in the “MSDIN” family, which encode the precursors of the cyclic peptides; and prolyl oligopeptidase B (POPB), which recognizes the proproteins, and cleaves and macrocyclizes them into unmodified cyclic peptides [10,11,12]

  • In order to illustrate the phylogenetic position of A. molliuscula among lethal amanitas [38,39]

  • In order to illustrate the phylogenetic position of A. molliuscula among amanitas, 12 species distributed in Europe, North America and Asia were selected for relethal amanitas, 12 species distributed in Europe, North America and Asia were selected construction

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Summary

Introduction

The lethal doses of amanitins, members of the amatoxin group of bicyclic octapeptides, are extremely low, and a mature fruiting body of an amanitin-producing mushroom can cause death of an adult human being [1]. According to statistics from the China Center for Disease Control and Prevention (China CDC) from 2010 to 2020, there were 8007 poisoning incidents caused by poisonous mushrooms in China with 733 deaths [2,3,4]. The amanitin-containing mushrooms caused the majority (68.0–90.9%) of those deaths. Amanita species mainly include two types of cyclic peptides: amatoxins and phallotoxins [1,5]. The biosynthesis of amatoxins is mainly completed by two important groups of genes: those in the “MSDIN” family, which encode the precursors of the cyclic peptides; and prolyl oligopeptidase B (POPB), which recognizes the proproteins, and cleaves and macrocyclizes them into unmodified cyclic peptides [10,11,12]

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