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Insight into trade-off between wood decay and parasitism from the genome of a fungal forest pathogen
ISSN
1469-8137
0028-646X
Date Issued
2012
Author(s)
Olson, Ake
Aerts, Andrea L.
Asiegbu, Fred O.
Belbahri, Lassaad
Bouzid, Ourdia
Broberg, Anders
Canback, Bjorn
Coutinho, Pedro M.
Cullen, Dan
Dalman, Kerstin
Deflorio, Giuliana
van Diepen, Linda T. A.
Dunand, Christophe
Duplessis, Sebastien
Durling, Mikael
Gonthier, Paolo
Grimwood, Jane
Fossdal, Carl Gunnar
Hansson, David
Henrissat, Bernard
Hietala, Ari
Himmelstrand, Kajsa
Hoffmeister, Dirk
Hogberg, Nils
James, Timothy Y.
Karlsson, Magnus
Kohler, Annegret
Lee, Yong-Hwan
Lin, Yao-Cheng
Lind, Marten
Lindquist, Erika A.
Lombard, Vincent
Lucas, Susan M.
Lunden, Karl
Morin, Emmanuelle
Murat, Claude
Park, Jongsun
Raffaello, Tommaso
Rouze, Pierre
Salamov, Asaf A.
Schmutz, Jeremy
Solheim, Halvor
Stahlberg, Jerry
Velez, Heriberto
de Vries, Ronald P.
Wiebenga, A. D.
Woodward, Steve
Yakovlev, Igor
Garbelotto, Matteo
Martin, Francis M.
Grigoriev, Igor V.
Stenlid, Jan
DOI
10.1111/j.1469-8137.2012.04128.x
Abstract
Parasitism and saprotrophic wood decay are two fungal strategies fundamental for succession and nutrient cycling in forest ecosystems. An opportunity to assess the trade-off between these strategies is provided by the forest pathogen and wood decayer Heterobasidion annosum sensu lato. We report the annotated genome sequence and transcript profiling, as well as the quantitative trait loci mapping, of one member of the species complex: H similar to irregulare. Quantitative trait loci critical for pathogenicity, and rich in transposable elements, orphan and secreted genes, were identified. A wide range of cellulose-degrading enzymes are expressed during wood decay. By contrast, pathogenic interaction between H similar to irregulare and pine engages fewer carbohydrate-active enzymes, but involves an increase in pectinolytic enzymes, transcription modules for oxidative stress and secondary metabolite production. Our results show a trade-off in terms of constrained carbohydrate decomposition and membrane transport capacity during interaction with living hosts. Our findings establish that saprotrophic wood decay and necrotrophic parasitism involve two distinct, yet overlapping, processes.