Multiple recent horizontal transfers of a large genomic region in cheese making fungi

Kevin Cheeseman(Microbiologie de l’alimentation au service de la santé), Jeanne Ropars(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Pierre Renault(Microbiologie de l’alimentation au service de la santé), Joëlle Dupont(Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité), Jérôme Gouzy(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Antoine Branca(Écologie, Systématique et Évolution), Anne‐Laure Abraham(Microbiologie de l’alimentation au service de la santé), Maurizio Ceppi(Genomic Vision (France)), Emmanuel Conseiller(Genomic Vision (France)), Robert Debuchy(Université Paris-Sud), Fabienne Malagnac(Université Paris-Sud), Anne Goarin(Université Paris-Sud), Philippe Silar(Université Paris-Sud), Sandrine Lacoste(Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité), Erika Sallet(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Aaron Bensimon(Genomic Vision (France)), Tatiana Giraud(Écologie, Systématique et Évolution), Yves Brygoo
Nature Communications
January 10, 2014
Cited by 212Open Access
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Abstract

While the extent and impact of horizontal transfers in prokaryotes are widely acknowledged, their importance to the eukaryotic kingdom is unclear and thought by many to be anecdotal. Here we report multiple recent transfers of a huge genomic island between Penicillium spp. found in the food environment. Sequencing of the two leading filamentous fungi used in cheese making, P. roqueforti and P. camemberti, and comparison with the penicillin producer P. rubens reveals a 575 kb long genomic island in P. roqueforti—called Wallaby—present as identical fragments at non-homologous loci in P. camemberti and P. rubens. Wallaby is detected in Penicillium collections exclusively in strains from food environments. Wallaby encompasses about 250 predicted genes, some of which are probably involved in competition with microorganisms. The occurrence of multiple recent eukaryotic transfers in the food environment provides strong evidence for the importance of this understudied and probably underestimated phenomenon in eukaryotes. Horizontal gene transfers are known to play an important role in prokaryote evolution but their impact and prevalence in eukaryotes is less clear. Here, the authors sequence the genomes of cheese making fungi P. roqueforti and P. camemberti, and provide evidence for recent horizontal transfers of a large genomic region.


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