Genomic Analysis Enlightens Agaricales Lifestyle Evolution and Increasing Peroxidase Diversity
Author(s) -
Francisco J. RuizDueñas,
José María Barrasa,
Marisol SánchezGarcía,
Susana Camarero,
Shingo Miyauchi,
Ana Serrano,
Dolores Linde,
Rashid Babiker,
Élodie Drula,
Iván AyusoFernández,
Remedios Pacheco,
Guillermo Padilla,
Patrícia Ferreira,
Jorge Barriuso,
Harald Kellner,
Raúl Castanera,
Manuel Alfaro,
Lucı́a Ramı́rez,
Antonio G. Pisabarro,
Robert Riley,
Alan Kuo,
William Andreopoulos,
Kurt LaButti,
Jasmyn Pangilinan,
Andrew Tritt,
Anna Lipzen,
Guifen He,
Mi Yan,
Vivian Ng,
Igor V. Grigoriev,
Daniel Cullen,
Francis Martin,
Marie-Noëlle Rosso,
Bernard Henrissat,
David S. Hibbett,
Ángel T. Martı́nez
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
molecular biology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.637
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1537-1719
pISSN - 0737-4038
DOI - 10.1093/molbev/msaa301
Subject(s) - agaricomycetes , biology , agaricales , decomposer , context (archaeology) , botany , evolutionary biology , ecology , basidiomycota , taxonomy (biology) , paleontology , ecosystem
As actors of global carbon cycle, Agaricomycetes (Basidiomycota) have developed complex enzymatic machineries that allow them to decompose all plant polymers, including lignin. Among them, saprotrophic Agaricales are characterized by an unparalleled diversity of habitats and lifestyles. Comparative analysis of 52 Agaricomycetes genomes (14 of them sequenced de novo) reveals that Agaricales possess a large diversity of hydrolytic and oxidative enzymes for lignocellulose decay. Based on the gene families with the predicted highest evolutionary rates-namely cellulose-binding CBM1, glycoside hydrolase GH43, lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase AA9, class-II peroxidases, glucose-methanol-choline oxidase/dehydrogenases, laccases, and unspecific peroxygenases-we reconstructed the lifestyles of the ancestors that led to the extant lignocellulose-decomposing Agaricomycetes. The changes in the enzymatic toolkit of ancestral Agaricales are correlated with the evolution of their ability to grow not only on wood but also on leaf litter and decayed wood, with grass-litter decomposers as the most recent eco-physiological group. In this context, the above families were analyzed in detail in connection with lifestyle diversity. Peroxidases appear as a central component of the enzymatic toolkit of saprotrophic Agaricomycetes, consistent with their essential role in lignin degradation and high evolutionary rates. This includes not only expansions/losses in peroxidase genes common to other basidiomycetes but also the widespread presence in Agaricales (and Russulales) of new peroxidases types not found in wood-rotting Polyporales, and other Agaricomycetes orders. Therefore, we analyzed the peroxidase evolution in Agaricomycetes by ancestral-sequence reconstruction revealing several major evolutionary pathways and mapped the appearance of the different enzyme types in a time-calibrated species tree.
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