The MSDIN family in amanitin-producing mushrooms and evolution of the prolyl oligopeptidase genes

Abstract The biosynthetic pathway for amanitins and related cyclic peptides in deadly Amanita (Amanitaceae) mushrooms represents the first known ribosomal cyclic peptide pathway in the Fungi. Amanitins are found outside of the genus in distantly related agarics Galerina (Strophariaceae) and Lepiota...

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Main Authors: Hong Luo, Qing Cai, Yunjiao Lüli, Xuan Li, Rohita Sinha, Heather E. Hallen-Adams, Zhu L. Yang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-12-01
Series:IMA Fungus
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.5598/imafungus.2018.09.02.01
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spelling doaj-c33447ddcb19480da9516cba1299f14a2020-11-25T00:46:04ZengBMCIMA Fungus2210-63592018-12-019222524210.5598/imafungus.2018.09.02.01The MSDIN family in amanitin-producing mushrooms and evolution of the prolyl oligopeptidase genesHong Luo0Qing Cai1Yunjiao Lüli2Xuan Li3Rohita Sinha4Heather E. Hallen-Adams5Zhu L. Yang6Key Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of SciencesKey Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of SciencesKey Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of SciencesDepartment of Environmental Science and Engineering, Kunming University of Science and TechnologyViracor Eurofins, Lee’s SummitDepartment of Food Science and Technology, University of Nebraska-LincolnKey Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia, Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of SciencesAbstract The biosynthetic pathway for amanitins and related cyclic peptides in deadly Amanita (Amanitaceae) mushrooms represents the first known ribosomal cyclic peptide pathway in the Fungi. Amanitins are found outside of the genus in distantly related agarics Galerina (Strophariaceae) and Lepiota (Agaricaceae). A long-standing question in the field persists: why is this pathway present in these phylogenetically disjunct agarics? Two deadly mushrooms, A. pallidorosea and A. subjunquillea, were deep sequenced, and sequences of biosynthetic genes encoding MSDINs (cyclic peptide precursor) and prolyl oligopeptidases (POPA and POPB) were obtained. The two Amanita species yielded 29 and 18 MSDINs, respectively. In addition, two MSDIN sequences were cloned from L. brunneoincarnata basidiomes. The toxin MSDIN genes encoding amatoxins or phallotoxins from the three genera were compared, and a phylogenetic tree constructed. Prolyl oligopeptidase B (POPB), a key enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway, was used in phylogenetic reconstruction to infer the evolutionary history of the genes. Phylogenies of POPB and POPA based on both coding and amino acid sequences showed very different results: while POPA genes clearly reflected the phylogeny of the host species, POPB did not; strikingly, it formed a wellsupported monophyletic clade, despite that the species belong to different genera in disjunct families. POPA, a known house-keeping gene, was shown to be restricted in a branch containing only Amanita species and the phylogeny resembled that of those Amanita species. Phylogenetic analyses of MSDIN and POPB genes showed tight coordination and disjunct distribution. A POPB gene tree was compared with a corresponding species tree, and distances and substitution rates were compared. The result suggested POPB genes have significant smaller distances and rates than the house-keeping rpb2, discounting massive gene loss. Under this assumption, the incongruency between the gene tree and species tree was shown with strong support. Additionally, k-mer analyses consistently cluster Galerina and Amanita POPB genes, while Lepiota POPB is distinct. Our result suggests that horizontal gene transfer (HGT), at least between Amanita and Galerina, was involved in the acquisition of POPB genes, which may shed light on the evolution of the α-amanitin biosynthetic pathway.http://link.springer.com/article/10.5598/imafungus.2018.09.02.01AmanitaGalerinaLepiotaamatoxinphallotoxinphylogeny
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hong Luo
Qing Cai
Yunjiao Lüli
Xuan Li
Rohita Sinha
Heather E. Hallen-Adams
Zhu L. Yang
spellingShingle Hong Luo
Qing Cai
Yunjiao Lüli
Xuan Li
Rohita Sinha
Heather E. Hallen-Adams
Zhu L. Yang
The MSDIN family in amanitin-producing mushrooms and evolution of the prolyl oligopeptidase genes
IMA Fungus
Amanita
Galerina
Lepiota
amatoxin
phallotoxin
phylogeny
author_facet Hong Luo
Qing Cai
Yunjiao Lüli
Xuan Li
Rohita Sinha
Heather E. Hallen-Adams
Zhu L. Yang
author_sort Hong Luo
title The MSDIN family in amanitin-producing mushrooms and evolution of the prolyl oligopeptidase genes
title_short The MSDIN family in amanitin-producing mushrooms and evolution of the prolyl oligopeptidase genes
title_full The MSDIN family in amanitin-producing mushrooms and evolution of the prolyl oligopeptidase genes
title_fullStr The MSDIN family in amanitin-producing mushrooms and evolution of the prolyl oligopeptidase genes
title_full_unstemmed The MSDIN family in amanitin-producing mushrooms and evolution of the prolyl oligopeptidase genes
title_sort msdin family in amanitin-producing mushrooms and evolution of the prolyl oligopeptidase genes
publisher BMC
series IMA Fungus
issn 2210-6359
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Abstract The biosynthetic pathway for amanitins and related cyclic peptides in deadly Amanita (Amanitaceae) mushrooms represents the first known ribosomal cyclic peptide pathway in the Fungi. Amanitins are found outside of the genus in distantly related agarics Galerina (Strophariaceae) and Lepiota (Agaricaceae). A long-standing question in the field persists: why is this pathway present in these phylogenetically disjunct agarics? Two deadly mushrooms, A. pallidorosea and A. subjunquillea, were deep sequenced, and sequences of biosynthetic genes encoding MSDINs (cyclic peptide precursor) and prolyl oligopeptidases (POPA and POPB) were obtained. The two Amanita species yielded 29 and 18 MSDINs, respectively. In addition, two MSDIN sequences were cloned from L. brunneoincarnata basidiomes. The toxin MSDIN genes encoding amatoxins or phallotoxins from the three genera were compared, and a phylogenetic tree constructed. Prolyl oligopeptidase B (POPB), a key enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway, was used in phylogenetic reconstruction to infer the evolutionary history of the genes. Phylogenies of POPB and POPA based on both coding and amino acid sequences showed very different results: while POPA genes clearly reflected the phylogeny of the host species, POPB did not; strikingly, it formed a wellsupported monophyletic clade, despite that the species belong to different genera in disjunct families. POPA, a known house-keeping gene, was shown to be restricted in a branch containing only Amanita species and the phylogeny resembled that of those Amanita species. Phylogenetic analyses of MSDIN and POPB genes showed tight coordination and disjunct distribution. A POPB gene tree was compared with a corresponding species tree, and distances and substitution rates were compared. The result suggested POPB genes have significant smaller distances and rates than the house-keeping rpb2, discounting massive gene loss. Under this assumption, the incongruency between the gene tree and species tree was shown with strong support. Additionally, k-mer analyses consistently cluster Galerina and Amanita POPB genes, while Lepiota POPB is distinct. Our result suggests that horizontal gene transfer (HGT), at least between Amanita and Galerina, was involved in the acquisition of POPB genes, which may shed light on the evolution of the α-amanitin biosynthetic pathway.
topic Amanita
Galerina
Lepiota
amatoxin
phallotoxin
phylogeny
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.5598/imafungus.2018.09.02.01
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