Abstract
BackgroundMembers of the genus Aspergillus display a variety of lifestyles, ranging from saprobic to pathogenic on plants and/or animals. Increased genome sequencing of economically important members of the genus permits effective use of “-omics” comparisons between closely related species and strains to identify candidate genes that may contribute to phenotypes of interest, especially relating to pathogenicity. Protein-coding genes were predicted from 216 genomes of 12 Aspergillus species, and the frequencies of various structural aspects (exon count and length, intron count and length, GC content, and codon usage) and functional annotations (InterPro, Gene Ontology, and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes terms) were compared.ResultsUsing principal component analyses, the three sets of functional annotations for each strain were clustered by species. The species clusters appeared to separate by pathogenicity on plants along the first dimensions, which accounted for over 20% of the variance. More annotations for genes encoding pectinases and secondary metabolite biosynthetic enzymes were assigned to phytopathogenic strains from species such as Aspergillus flavus. In contrast, Aspergillus fumigatus strains, which are pathogenic to animals but not plants, were assigned relatively more terms related to phosphate transferases, and carbohydrate and amino-sugar metabolism. Analyses of publicly available RNA-Seq data indicated that one A. fumigatus protein among 17 amino-sugar processing candidates, a hexokinase, was up-regulated during co-culturing with human immune system cells.ConclusionGenes encoding hexokinases and other proteins of interest may be subject to future manipulations to further refine understanding of Aspergillus pathogenicity factors.
Highlights
Members of the genus Aspergillus display a variety of lifestyles, ranging from saprobic to pathogenic on plants and/or animals
Invasive aspergillosis is usually caused by strains of A. fumigatus; less common Aspergillus causative agents are A. fischeri, A. flavus, A. nidulans, A. niger and A. terreus [9]
The present study demonstrates the utility of this approach by looking for new pathogenicity genes within the Aspergillus genus
Summary
Members of the genus Aspergillus display a variety of lifestyles, ranging from saprobic to pathogenic on plants and/or animals. A minority of fungi are pathogenic, mostly on plants, while the majority of fungal species are saprobes or mutualists [1]. Aspergillus provides an intriguing model for studying differentiation among opportunistic pathogens (both plant and animal) and saprobic decomposers. All members of this genus live largely as saprobes. Several species are able to cause rots on living plant tissues and/or invasive aspergillosis in immunocompromised mammals [3,4,5]. One Aspergillus species, A. sydowii, is salt-tolerant pathogen of coral and humans that may become more destructive with continued global warming, along with other pathogenic species [12]
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