Abstract

Most known examples of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) between eukaryotes are ancient. These events are identified primarily using phylogenetic methods on coding regions alone. Only rarely are there examples of HGT where noncoding DNA is also reported. The gene encoding the wheat virulence protein ToxA and the surrounding 14 kb is one of these rare examples. ToxA has been horizontally transferred between three fungal wheat pathogens (Parastagonospora nodorum, Pyrenophora tritici-repentis, and Bipolaris sorokiniana) as part of a conserved ∼14 kb element which contains coding and noncoding regions. Here we used long-read sequencing to define the extent of HGT between these three fungal species. Construction of near-chromosomal-level assemblies enabled identification of terminal inverted repeats on either end of the 14 kb region, typical of a type II DNA transposon. This is the first description of ToxA with complete transposon features, which we call ToxhAT. In all three species, ToxhAT resides in a large (140-to-250 kb) transposon-rich genomic island which is absent in isolates that do not carry the gene (annotated here as toxa- ). We demonstrate that the horizontal transfer of ToxhAT between P. tritici-repentis and P. nodorum occurred as part of a large (∼80 kb) HGT which is now undergoing extensive decay. In B. sorokiniana, in contrast, ToxhAT and its resident genomic island are mobile within the genome. Together, these data provide insight into the noncoding regions that facilitate HGT between eukaryotes and into the genomic processes which mask the extent of HGT between these species.IMPORTANCE This work dissects the tripartite horizontal transfer of ToxA, a gene that has a direct negative impact on global wheat yields. Defining the extent of horizontally transferred DNA is important because it can provide clues to the mechanisms that facilitate HGT. Our analysis of ToxA and its surrounding 14 kb suggests that this gene was horizontally transferred in two independent events, with one event likely facilitated by a type II DNA transposon. These horizontal transfer events are now in various processes of decay in each species due to the repeated insertion of new transposons and subsequent rounds of targeted mutation by a fungal genome defense mechanism known as repeat induced point mutation. This work highlights the role that HGT plays in the evolution of host adaptation in eukaryotic pathogens. It also increases the growing body of evidence indicating that transposons facilitate adaptive HGT events between fungi present in similar environments and hosts.

Highlights

  • Most known examples of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) between eukaryotes are ancient

  • The genomic location of ToxA has been best described in P. tritici-repentis, where two long-read assemblies place this gene in the middle of chromosome 06 [23, 31]

  • Several long-read assemblies have been generated for ToxAϩ P. nodorum isolates Sn4 and Sn2000, where ToxA is found on chromosome 08 in both isolates [29]

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Summary

Introduction

Most known examples of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) between eukaryotes are ancient. ToxA has been horizontally transferred between three fungal wheat pathogens (Parastagonospora nodorum, Pyrenophora tritici-repentis, and Bipolaris sorokiniana) as part of a conserved ϳ14 kb element which contains coding and noncoding regions. The reported HGT events are extensive and involve tens of thousands of bases of DNA, which remain over 90% identical between very distantly related species [10, 11] These HGTs contain both coding and noncoding regions which are stably integrated into the core nuclear genomes of the recipient species [10, 11]. Rapid adaptation via HGT is not restricted to domesticated species, but there exist very few described instances where the horizontally transferred DNA is integrated into the core nuclear genome and remains highly identical outside coding regions. In the absence of Tsn, all three fungal species can still infect wheat due to the presence of other virulence genes [17, 19, 20]

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