학술논문

Desert truffle genomes reveal their reproductive modes and new insights into plant–fungal interaction and ectendomycorrhizal lifestyle
Document Type
article
Source
New Phytologist. 229(5)
Subject
Microbiology
Plant Biology
Biological Sciences
Ecology
Genetics
Ascomycota
Cistaceae
Life Style
Mycorrhizae
Reproduction
Symbiosis
arid environment
desert truffles
drought stress
ectendomycorrhizal symbiosis
MAT genes
mycorrhiza
plant–
microbe interactions
plant-microbe interactions
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Plant Biology & Botany
Plant biology
Climate change impacts and adaptation
Ecological applications
Language
Abstract
Desert truffles are edible hypogeous fungi forming ectendomycorrhizal symbiosis with plants of Cistaceae family. Knowledge about the reproductive modes of these fungi and the molecular mechanisms driving the ectendomycorrhizal interaction is lacking. Genomes of the highly appreciated edible desert truffles Terfezia claveryi Chatin and Tirmania nivea Trappe have been sequenced and compared with other Pezizomycetes. Transcriptomes of T. claveryi × Helianthemum almeriense mycorrhiza from well-watered and drought-stressed plants, when intracellular colonizations is promoted, were investigated. We have identified the fungal genes related to sexual reproduction in desert truffles and desert-truffles-specific genomic and secretomic features with respect to other Pezizomycetes, such as the expansion of a large set of gene families with unknown Pfam domains and a number of species or desert-truffle-specific small secreted proteins differentially regulated in symbiosis. A core set of plant genes, including carbohydrate, lipid-metabolism, and defence-related genes, differentially expressed in mycorrhiza under both conditions was found. Our results highlight the singularities of desert truffles with respect to other mycorrhizal fungi while providing a first glimpse on plant and fungal determinants involved in ecto to endo symbiotic switch that occurs in desert truffle under dry conditions.