#PAGE_PARAMS# #ADS_HEAD_SCRIPTS# #MICRODATA#

Genomic rearrangements generate hypervariable mini-chromosomes in host-specific isolates of the blast fungus


Authors: Thorsten Langner aff001;  Adeline Harant aff001;  Luis B. Gomez-Luciano aff002;  Ram K. Shrestha aff001;  Angus Malmgren aff001;  Sergio M. Latorre aff003;  Hernán A. Burbano aff004;  Joe Win aff001;  Sophien Kamoun aff001
Authors place of work: The Sainsbury Laboratory, University of East Anglia, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, United Kingdom aff001;  Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan aff002;  Research group for Ancient Genomics and Evolution, Department of Molecular Biology, Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology, Tübingen, Germany aff003;  Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution, Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London, United Kingdom aff004
Published in the journal: Genomic rearrangements generate hypervariable mini-chromosomes in host-specific isolates of the blast fungus. PLoS Genet 17(2): e1009386. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1009386
Category: Research Article
doi: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1009386

Summary

Supernumerary mini-chromosomes–a unique type of genomic structural variation–have been implicated in the emergence of virulence traits in plant pathogenic fungi. However, the mechanisms that facilitate the emergence and maintenance of mini-chromosomes across fungi remain poorly understood. In the blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae (Syn. Pyricularia oryzae), mini-chromosomes have been first described in the early 1990s but, until very recently, have been overlooked in genomic studies. Here we investigated structural variation in four isolates of the blast fungus M. oryzae from different grass hosts and analyzed the sequences of mini-chromosomes in the rice, foxtail millet and goosegrass isolates. The mini-chromosomes of these isolates turned out to be highly diverse with distinct sequence composition. They are enriched in repetitive elements and have lower gene density than core-chromosomes. We identified several virulence-related genes in the mini-chromosome of the rice isolate, including the virulence-related polyketide synthase Ace1 and two variants of the effector gene AVR-Pik. Macrosynteny analyses around these loci revealed structural rearrangements, including inter-chromosomal translocations between core- and mini-chromosomes. Our findings provide evidence that mini-chromosomes emerge from structural rearrangements and segmental duplication of core-chromosomes and might contribute to adaptive evolution of the blast fungus.

Keywords:

Fungal genomics – Genome analysis – Genomics – Plant fungal pathogens – Protein domains – Rice – Sequence alignment – Structural genomics

Introduction

Genomes of plant pathogens are highly dynamic and typically exhibit an architecture that facilitates rapid adaptation to their hosts. Since the rise of genome sequencing it became evident that plant pathogen genomes are often structured to facilitate high genetic diversification rates at virulence-related loci while maintaining relative stability in house-keeping regions, a phenomenon that shaped the term “two-speed genome” [1]. Since then, the two-speed genome concept has been widely documented in a number of plant pathogenic species [2,3]. Interestingly, various types of genome architecture have been observed in different species. These include effector gene clusters [4,5], lineage-specific genomic regions that are rich in transposable elements [610], or enrichment of virulence related genes in specific genomic regions, e.g. unstable telomeric and sub-telomeric regions [11]. Typically, these genomic compartments display higher rates of adaptive mutations compared to the rest of the genome [12]. In addition to signatures of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) indicative of positive selection and presence/absence polymorphisms, structural variation is common in pathogen populations and ranges from copy number variations of single genes to chromosome-scale rearrangements [13,14]. Extreme cases of genomic rearrangement are large-scale, chromosome length variations and the presence of isolate-specific, supernumerary chromosomes (syn. B-, accessory-, conditionally dispensable, mini-chromosomes). These are usually small, non-essential chromosomes that occur in addition to the regular set of conserved chromosomes within a species and have been described in animals, plants, and fungi [14,15]. Supernumerary chromosomes are present at different frequencies in natural populations of eukaryotic plant pathogens [14,16]. In some fungal species, supernumerary chromosomes have been directly implicated in the emergence of new virulence traits, underpinning the importance of understanding their role in evolution and pathogen adaptation [1719]. However, the diversity of supernumerary chromosomes across plant pathogens and their contribution to genome plasticity is still poorly known.

Supernumerary chromosomes share common features that distinguish them from core-chromosomes. Although they are variable in size, they tend to be smaller than core-chromosomes ranging from ~400 kb to 3 Mb in plant pathogenic fungi [8,14]. Yet, despite their small size, supernumerary chromosomes can contribute as much as 15% to the total genome in certain species. Their number is also variable with some plant pathogenic fungi containing up to eight supernumerary chromosomes in addition to the core-chromosome set [9]. Dynamic loss or gain of supernumerary chromosomes has been observed especially under stress conditions indicating that supernumerary chromosomes are major drivers of genome plasticity [20]. In addition to frequent genomic rearrangements, supernumerary chromosomes often do not follow Mendelian inheritance. They tend to be meiotically unstable, and thus, are frequently lost [21]. However, in some cases meiotic gene drives have been observed increasing their capacity to be inherited and potentially explaining their abundance in pathogen populations [22].

Supernumerary chromosomes are usually gene poor and repeat rich compared to the core-chromosomes, and form one illustration of the two-speed genome concept [12,23]. However, a clear association with adaptive evolution is not always evident as they do not necessarily carry virulence-related genes [9,24]. Nonetheless, in some plant pathogenic fungi, supernumerary chromosomes are directly implicated in virulence [17,18]. The origin of supernumerary chromosomes is still debated but there is evidence for segmental duplications from core-chromosomes (or ancient core-chromosome duplication followed by partial chromosome loss) and horizontal chromosome transfer [19,2527]. Interestingly, supernumerary chromosomes can be transferred between isolates independently of the core genome and can alter the virulence spectrum of plant pathogens [19,27]. It is thus possible that supernumerary chromosomes facilitate gene flow in natural populations leading to new pathotypes.

Plant pathogens are ubiquitous in the environment and can cause severe damage to both cultivated and wild plant species [2831]. Plant pathogens are often specialized on specific host species or taxon. At the center of the co-evolutionary dynamics between pathogens and plants are effector proteins, i.e. secreted proteins that manipulate host processes to facilitate infection and colonization [3235]. In return, host plants have evolved immune receptors that can detect conserved molecular patterns and effector proteins to defend against invading pathogens [36,37]. This generally leads to fast-paced co-evolution between pathogens and their host plants that often follows arms-race dynamics where the frequency of adaptive mutations rises quickly in pathogen populations [16].

The fungus M. oryzae (Syn. Pyricularia oryzae) causes blast disease, one of the most devastating crop diseases worldwide resulting in yield losses in rice and wheat that make it a threat to global food security [28,29,38,39]. Despite its Linnaean binomial name, M. oryzae is a multihost pathogen that can infect more than 50 cultivated and wild grass species. Population genomics of M. oryzae revealed that the species is formed by an assemblage of differentiated lineages that are associated with particular host taxa, such as important cereals like rice (Oryza sativa), finger millet (Eleusine coracana), wheat (Triticum aestivum), and foxtail millet (Setaria italica), as well as weeds such as Indian goosegrass (Eleusine indica) [40,41]. Records of rice blast disease in China date back to the early 17th century and until today it is recognized as one of the most threatening and widely distributed rice diseases [39]. Recent population genetics studies revealed that the rice-infecting lineage of M. oryzae consists of both a recombining population and multiple, clonally expanded lineages that have emerged in the last few hundred years [4244]. In Europe, the rice blast fungus population consists of only one of three major clonal lineages and it is possible that mating type isolation led to local asexual expansions. Another impactful blast disease is wheat blast. In the mid 1980s the disease emerged on wheat plants in Brazil and has since spread across large regions of South America and, more recently, South Asia, demonstrating the ability of M. oryzae to rapidly undergo host-range expansions and global pandemics [4547].

Although signatures of gene flow have been observed within and between lineages [41], M. oryzae is thought to predominantly propagate asexually in agricultural settings. Given that genetically differentiated lineages tend to be associated with particular host genera, selection pressure imposed by the host plant is probably the main driver of adaptive evolution [41]. Adaptation to a specific host can be accompanied by gain or loss of effector genes that define the pathogen host range highlighting the importance of structural genomic variation [35,4850]. The degree to which genome architecture facilitates structural variation and even gene flow is a fascinating but still poorly understood question [6,11,23,51].

M. oryzae mini-chromosomes have first been described in the early 1990s, when studies on karyotype diversity revealed that large chromosomal rearrangements occur frequently within and between clonal lineages [52,53]. More recently, Chuma et al. [11] demonstrated that the effector gene AVR-Pita underwent multiple translocation events and proposed that genomic location of effector genes to sub-telomeric regions could favor rearrangements within the genome and gene flow within asexual populations. Interestingly, AVR-Pita genes occur on different chromosomes, including supernumerary mini-chromosomes. Additionally, Luo et al. [54] and Kusaba et al. [55] showed that two variants of the AVR-Pik effector gene are present on a 1.6 Mb mini-chromosome in the Japanese rice blast isolate 84R-62B and that parts of this mini-chromosome can translocate to core-chromosomes in crosses. Further, loss of the mini-chromosome resulted in gain of virulence on host plants carrying the rice immune receptor Pik, a phenotype due to the associated loss of the AVR-Pik genes [55].

Despite the fact that M. oryzae mini-chromosomes have been known for 30 years, genome sequencing projects have somehow overlooked them. This has changed recently. Peng et al. [56] reported the first sequences of mini-chromosomes of M. oryzae. They analyzed the karyotypes of the three wheat blast isolates T25, B71, and P3. T25 was collected in Brazil in 1988 and B71 and P3 were collected in 2012 in Brazil and Paraguay, respectively. B71 contains a 2 Mb mini-chromosome and P3 contains two mini-chromosomes of 1.5 and 3 Mb, whereas T25 does not contain any mini-chromosomes. The mini-chromosomes of B71 and P3 only share partial sequence similarity, have lower gene and higher repeat content, and display partial similarity to sub-telomeric regions of core-chromosomes. The mini-chromosome of isolate B71 contains the effector genes Pwl2 and Bas1 in close proximity whereas they are located on separate core-chromosomes in other M. oryzae isolates. This raised the hypothesis that mini-chromosomes are sites of structural rearrangements associated with virulence factors within blast genomes. However, the genetic diversity of mini-chromosomes in other lineages of M. oryzae, and their association with genomic rearrangements and effector diversification remains poorly understood.

The objective of this study was to gain an overall picture of genomic structural variation across lineages of M. oryzae using the host-specific isolates from rice, foxtail millet, goosegrass and wheat that were previously sequenced using Illumina short reads by Chiapello et al. [48]. Our analyses led us to focus on mini-chromosomes, which we detected in three of the examined isolates of M. oryzae. We used long and short read sequencing data in combination with mini-chromosome isolation sequencing (MCIS) to improve the previous genome assemblies [48] to near chromosome quality. We found that the sequence composition of mini-chromosomes is highly variable indicating independent emergence of individual mini-chromosomes or rapid divergence including gene presence/absence polymorphisms during M. oryzae lineage evolution. Further, we identified effector and virulence-related genes in the mini-chromosome of the rice-infecting isolate FR13 although this protein class was not generally enriched in the three sequenced mini-chromosomes compared to the core chromosomes. We documented several structural rearrangements around virulence-related loci which raises the possibility that chromosome-scale variation, notably mini-chromosome genesis, plays a role in driving adaptive genome plasticity in the blast fungus.

Results

Near chromosome quality genome assemblies of four host-specific isolates of M. oryzae

Considering that structural genomic variation has emerged as a common feature of fungal plant pathogens, we re-examined 4 previously sequenced M. oryzae genomes of the host specific isolates FR13 (rice), US71 (foxtail millet), CD156 (goosegrass), and BR32 (wheat). We used long read sequencing to generate highly contiguous assemblies [57] and improved accuracy of the assemblies by applying a polishing pipeline using nanopore and published Illumina raw reads of the same strains [48]. To assess the completeness and quality of our assemblies, we performed a benchmarking universal single-copy orthologs (BUSCO) analysis using the Sordariomycota database (https://busco.ezlab.org/) which confirmed 98–98.2% completeness, similar to the chromosome quality reference genome of strain 70–15 (assembly version 8, ensemble release 45; 98.2%; Table 1) [58]. Overall, the new assemblies have vastly improved contiguity with scaffold numbers reduced from 111–2,051 in previous assemblies to 17–55 in the new assemblies (Table 1). Moreover, we increased the proportion of well-assembled repeat rich regions, reduced the number of ambiguous bases (“Ns”) to zero, and improved overall completeness (Table 1). These highly contiguous assemblies can thus serve as new reference genomes for host-specific isolates of M. oryzae.

Tab. 1. Comparative summary statistics of genome assemblies.
Comparative summary statistics of genome assemblies.

The rice, foxtail millet and goosegrass isolates of M. oryzae contain unique sets of mini-chromosomes

To assess the genomes for karyotype variation, we separated and visualized intact chromosomes of each strain by contour-clamped homogenous electric field (CHEF) gel electrophoresis. Strikingly, we found large-scale, structural variation in the form of chromosome length polymorphisms and supernumerary mini-chromosomes in the isolates FR13, US71, and CD156 (Fig 1). The mini-chromosomes ranged in size between approximately 800 kb and 1.5 Mb. We hypothesized that these mini-chromosomes contribute to structural variation and might be similar to supernumerary, lineage specific chromosomes reported in other plant pathogenic fungi. Supernumerary chromosomes can have important functions in pathogenicity, but their sequence composition and intraspecies variation in M. oryzae is still poorly understood.

Host-specific isolates of <i>M</i>. <i>oryzae</i> contain mini-chromosomes of various sizes.
Fig. 1. Host-specific isolates of M. oryzae contain mini-chromosomes of various sizes.
Contour-clamped homogenous electric field (CHEF) gel electrophoresis of intact M. oryzae chromosomes. Chromosome size variation between M. oryzae isolates is present in both, mini-chromosomes and core chromosomes. Strains FR13, US71, and CD156 contain mini-chromosomes ranging in size between approximately 850 kb and 1.5 Mb. Left lane: Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosomes as size marker.

To further analyze the sequence composition of the observed mini-chromosomes, we identified their corresponding scaffolds in our whole genome assemblies by purifying mini-chromosomal DNA from CHEF gels by electro-elution for mini-chromosome isolation sequencing (detailed protocol available on protocol.io [57]; adapted from [56]). We then mapped mini-chromosome derived raw reads against the whole genome assemblies to identify specific scaffolds with high coverage compared to the rest of the genome, indicating their mini-chromosomal origin (Figs 2 and S1S4). Importantly, all core-chromosome scaffolds (> 2 Mb) showed extremely low coverage confirming the robustness of this approach (S1S4 Figs).

<i>M</i>. <i>oryzae</i> strain FR13 contains a 1.7 Mb mini-chromosome assembled into 2 scaffolds.
Fig. 2. M. oryzae strain FR13 contains a 1.7 Mb mini-chromosome assembled into 2 scaffolds.
A) Circos plot of mini-chromosome isolation sequencing (MCIS) read coverage and repeat content across FR13 scaffolds < 2 Mb. Outer ring (rainbow colors): FR13 scaffolds and scaffold sizes. Outer track (Red/Black): MCIS coverage per sliding window. Window size = 1000 bp; Slide distance: 500 bp. Y-axes: average coverage per 1 kb window; axis limits set to zero to maximum coverage. Inner track (Blue/Black): Repeat content per sliding window. Window size = 10 kbp; Slide distance: 5 kbp. Y-axes: repeat content in bp per 10 kb window; axis limits set to zero to maximum. B) Circos plot of MCIS read coverage and repeat content for scaffolds <200 kb (enlarged from A).

Repetitive sequences could lead to ambiguous mapping of reads due to the presence of similar repetitive regions in core-chromosomes. To confirm that the observed increase in coverage is linked to mini-chromosome enrichment and not to ambiguous read mapping, we plotted the repeat content per 10 kb sliding window and compared it to the coverage of uniquely mapping reads derived from mini-chromosome sequencing. This analysis showed that repeat-rich regions did not overlap with regions of high coverage, which confirmed that the enrichment was not due to repetitive sequences and ambiguous read mapping. Using this method, we identified 2, 4, and 3 scaffolds with high depth and breadth of coverage for strains FR13 (Figs 2 and S1), US71 (S2 and S3 Figs), and CD156 (S4 Fig), respectively. The combined size of mini-chromosome scaffolds was 1.7 Mb for FR13, 1.58 Mb for US71, and 860 kb for CD156. For FR13 and CD156 the combined length of mini-chromosome scaffolds matched the size observed on CHEF gels. However, the combined length of US71 mini-chromosome scaffolds adds up to approximately double the size of the mini-chromosome identified by CHEF analysis, indicating that US71 contains two mini-chromosomes of similar size that cannot be separated by CHEF gel electrophoresis, that there is a misassembly or that rearrangements occurred during culturing of this strain. To further investigate this, we mapped whole genome nanopore sequencing reads against the US71 genome and extracted the coverage information of mini-chromosome scaffolds (S5 Fig). Although all mini-chromosome scaffolds are overall well supported by >100x coverage, we noticed that two regions on scaffold 14 and 21, respectively, showed a drop in coverage that correlated with a drop in mini-chromosome sequencing coverage. We further compared the nanopore coverage of the mini-chromosome scaffolds with the average whole genome coverage. This analysis revealed that regions with high mini-chromosome read coverage have approximately twice as much average coverage as compared to the whole genome, whereas regions on the proposed mini-chromosome scaffolds with low mini-chromosome coverage displayed average whole genome coverage. This suggests that mini-chromosomes in US71 contain duplicated sequences that are not resolved in the current assembly.

We also noticed an enrichment of mapped mini-chromosome reads to the start of scaffold 2 in strain CD156 (S4 Fig), which might indicate that a segmental duplication of a core-chromosomal region contributed to the emergence of the mini-chromosome in this isolate. To confirm the assembly of this region, we mapped CD156 nanopore reads against the whole genome sequence resulting in a continuous coverage of ~80x across the entire scaffold, which is consistent with the average whole genome coverage and thus confirmed the assembly (S6A Fig). This suggests that the sub-telomeric region of CD156 scaffold 2 is indeed duplicated and present on core- and mini-chromosomes. To gain further evidence for this duplication, we re-mapped the nanopore reads to the isolated scaffold 2. As expected for a duplication, we noticed a ~2x increase in coverage in this region (S6B Fig), confirming a duplication between the core genomic scaffold 2 and the mini-chromosome. We further aligned the CD156 mini-chromosome scaffolds to scaffold 2 which suggested that the mini-chromosome in this isolate represents a mosaic of repeat-rich sequences acquired from the core-genomic scaffold 2 (S6C Fig). Taken together we identified and sequenced mini-chromosomes of varying size in three isolates of M. oryzae that might represent isolate-specific, genomic compartments in M. oryzae.

The three examined mini-chromosomes of M. oryzae have a different sequence composition

Based on the variation in mini-chromosome size and number, we hypothesized that they have unique sequence composition. We first investigated whether the content of mini-chromosomes is conserved in the core genome of reference strain 70–15 by globally aligning the mini-chromosomes to 70–15. This revealed that only a 761 kb fragment out of the ~1.7 Mb FR13 mini-chromosome generated an alignment matching a ~900 kb region at the end of core chromosome 2 of isolate 70–15. The mini-chromosomes of US71 and CD156 did not generate significant alignments with the reference genome.

As synteny breaks might disrupt the global alignments between the mini-chromosomes and the 70–15 genome, we further mapped mini-chromosome derived raw reads against the 70–15 assembly. The ~900 kb region on chromosome 2 of strain 70–15 showed high coverage after mapping the mini-chromosome reads of strain FR13, confirming that this region of the mini-chromosome corresponds to the end of core-chromosome 2 in 70–15. However, we did not observe unique regions with high coverage after mapping of mini-chromosome derived reads from the more distantly related strains US71 and CD156 (S7 Fig). This indicates that the mini-chromosomes of these strains contain unique sequences compared to strains FR13 and 70–15. We further examined the total amount of reads that mapped to any position in the reference genome. We found that 82.78%, 59.77%, and 55.49% of mini-chromosome reads of FR13, US71, and CD156, respectively, mapped to the same regions in the reference genome leading to local coverage peaks irrespective of the mini-chromosome reads used, indicative for unspecific mapping. However, the fraction of unmapped reads varied between FR13 (17.21%) and US71 (40.23%) or CD156 (44.51%) indicating that almost half of the mini-chromosome derived reads of US71 and CD156 originate from isolate-specific regions. Conversely, only 17% of mini-chromosome reads derived from the rice infecting isolate FR13 were strain specific, indicating higher levels of sequence conservation within the rice infecting isolates.

To further assess the uniqueness of mini-chromosomes between isolates, we performed pairwise alignments between extracted mini-chromosome scaffolds of each strain. We filtered the alignments for regions that align over > 10kb to exclude unspecific, short alignments generated by repetitive regions or local similarities. Only a small fraction of the mini-chromosomes aligned under these parameters, whereas core-chromosomes were highly similar to each other (Fig 3A). Between CD156 and US71 only 28.39% and 15.39% of the mini-chromosomes generated alignments, respectively. Between FR13 and US71 the fraction of the mini-chromosomes that generated alignments was even lower with 15.01% and 14.02% and between FR13 and CD156 it was only 5.14% or 2.61%, respectively (Fig 3B). In contrast, between 73.88% and 81.26% of the core-genome generated alignments. We conclude that the three examined mini-chromosomes of M. oryzae have unique sequence composition.

Mini-chromosomes of <i>M</i>. <i>oryzae</i> are isolate specific.
Fig. 3. Mini-chromosomes of M. oryzae are isolate specific.
A) Circos plots depicting alignments between mini-chromosomes (left) and core-chromosomes (right). Outer ring: Mini-chromosome scaffolds and sizes. Alignments > 10 kb are plotted as genetic links in the center. B) Relative fraction of mini- and core-chromosomes that generate pairwise alignments. Relative fraction of the genomic compartment that form alignments > 10 kb are shown for each pairwise alignment and each individual isolate. Approximately 75% of the core-chromosomes generate alignments under these parameters, whereas only 2.61–28.39% of mini-chromosomes do.

The three mini-chromosomes are less conserved than core-chromosomes across M. oryzae lineages

To determine the extent to which the three mini-chromosome encoded sequences are conserved in various host-specific lineages of M. oryzae we performed whole genome alignments of 107 publicly available assemblies [41,59,60] to the mini-chromosomes of FR13, US71 and CD156. The selected assemblies are representative of 10 genetic lineages with isolates from 13 host species. We also included the Pyricularia pennisetigena isolate PM1 and six M. grisea isolates as outgroups in our analysis. As an additional control, we also aligned all genome assemblies to the core-chromosome scaffolds FR13_scaf05, US71_scaf04 and CD156_scaf05 that correspond to homologous core-chromosomes in the three isolates. We then calculated the breadth of coverage of all non-redundant alignments formed by each genome assembly with the core- and mini-chromosome scaffolds (Fig 4). Additionally, we analyzed filtered alignments that span >5 kb to exclude fragmented and repetitive alignments (Fig 4B and 4C).

Mini-chromosomes are less conserved than core-chromosomes across lineages of <i>M</i>. <i>oryzae</i>.
Fig. 4. Mini-chromosomes are less conserved than core-chromosomes across lineages of M. oryzae.
A) Conservation of core- and mini-chromosomes across host-specific lineages of M. oryzae based on breadth of coverage of non-redundant whole genome alignments against the three mini- and selected core-chromosome scaffolds. Heatmap values show the relative breadth of coverage of alignments for each mini-chromosome or core-chromosome scaffolds. Left panel: Schematic representation of a coalescent species tree representing host-specific genetic lineages of M. oryzae. Host genera are indicated in colors. Yellow = eragrostis lineage; Brown = brachiaria lineage 1 (isolate Bm88324) and 2 (Br2); Red = stenotaphrum lineage. B) Scatterplots showing the average breadth of coverage of alignments of core- over mini- chromosomes per host-specific lineage. C) Boxplots summarizing the breadth of coverage by genomic compartment across host-specific lineages.

This analysis showed that mini-chromosome encoded sequences are consistently less conserved than core-chromosomes across all lineages. In unfiltered alignments, mini-chromosomes yield on average between 50–80% coverage whereas core-chromosomes consistently align over >90% (Fig 4). The difference in conservation between mini- and core-chromosomes becomes even clearer when filtering for continuous alignments (>5 kb) where mini-chromosomes yield only between 10 to 50% coverage whereas core-chromosomes align over >80% (Fig 4B and 4C). Of the three analyzed mini-chromosomes, FR13 mini-chromosome sequences were the most conserved across all M. oryzae lineages at ~41% average breadth of coverage in contrast to ~21% and ~16% for mini-chromosome sequence of US71 and CD156, respectively (Fig 4C).

We further investigated the distribution of FR13, US71 and CD156 mini-chromosome encoded sequences across the rice lineage of M. oryzae using a wider set of isolates for which genome assemblies are not available [44]. In this case, we mapped reads from 131 rice infecting isolates from 21 countries that are representative of the 4 genetic lineages of the worldwide rice blast population [43,44,61] and calculated the breadth of coverage for the same mini-chromosome and core-chromosome contigs we used above. This analysis showed that the FR13 mini-chromosome encoded sequences are more conserved across rice blast isolates compared to the US71 and CD156 mini-chromosome sequences (S8 Fig). Interestingly, isolates from the recombining, presumably sexually reproducing lineage (orange lineage in [42,44]), showed higher degrees of variation in mini-chromosome sequence content.

Mini-chromosomes have lower gene and higher repeat density than core-chromosomes

To determine the gene content of the mini chromosomes, we mapped the GEMO gene annotations [48] to our new genome assemblies using BLASTn in combination with a sequence similarity approach (see Material and Methods). Of 14515, 14013 and 14415 genes that were used as queries, 13828, 13746 and 14201 mapped to a single site in the nanopore assemblies for strains FR13, US71 and CD156, respectively.

Another 175, 179 and 44 genes mapped to multiple sites reflecting duplicated genes that were likely collapsed in the previous short-read assemblies. Taking these expansions into account, we assigned 14322, 14348 and 14304 genes to FR13, US71 and CD156, respectively.

Of these genes, 13963, 13985 and 14143 mapped to the core chromosomes and 359, 363 and 161 mapped to the mini chromosomes of each isolate (S1 Table). On average, in each of the three mini-chromosomes the gene content was approximately 30% lower when compared to the core genome (Fig 5A and S1 Table).

We next analyzed the repeat and GC content of the mini-chromosome scaffolds compared to the core genomes. The GC content of core- and mini-chromosomes was similar at ~50%, whereas the repeat content of the three mini-chromosomes differed from the core genome (Fig 5A and S1 Table). Indeed, the repeat content was more than twice as high in mini-chromosomes (31.38%, 27.87%, and 17.25%) compared to core-chromosomes (13.78%, 12.71% and 5.99% in strains FR13, US71, and CD156 respectively (Fig 5A).

Mini-chromosomes have lower gene and higher repeat content than core-chromosomes.
Fig. 5. Mini-chromosomes have lower gene and higher repeat content than core-chromosomes.
A) Bar plots of gene and repeat content of mini- (red) and core-chromosomes (grey) of isolates FR13, US71, and CD156. B) Density plots resulting from a bootstrapping analysis of gene and repeat content of isolates FR13, US71, and CD156. 10000 core-genomic fragments were randomly sampled for each mini-chromosome scaffold and distribution of genes and basepairs of repeats are shown as densities. Number of genes and repeat content of mini-chromosome scaffolds are indicated by arrowheads. The size of mini-chromosome scaffolds is given in parentheses. Lower and upper 2.5% frequency intervals are shown in red and blue. X-axis: number of genes and basepairs of repeats. Y-axis: Frequency in 10000 fragments. Y-axis limits set to min/max.

To exclude the possibility that the observed differences are due to sample size biases that can occur by comparing mini-chromosomes that represent only small fractions of the genome to the much larger core-genome, we performed a bootstrapping analysis for each mini-chromosome scaffold (see Material and Methods). Briefly, we sampled 10,000 random fragments of the size of each mini-chromosome scaffold from the core genome and analyzed gene and repeat content. This bootstrapping approach confirmed higher repeat and lower gene content of mini-chromosomes (Fig 5B). These results indicate that even though the mini chromosomes have distinct sequences, they have common genomic features, low gene and high repeat density, that deviate from the typical composition of core chromosomes.

Mini-chromosome encoded genes have variable patterns of conservation across lineages

Our gene content analysis resulted in a total of 42,974 genes between all three isolates. We grouped these genes into 12,900 orthogroups, of which 9,003 were conserved across all three strains and 3,897 were absent in at least one strain (S2 Table). Among the 3,897 orthogroups that were absent in at least one strain, we found 1,827 that were conserved between two strains and 2,070 were unique to single strains. We further analyzed the location of these orthogroups and categorized them into “core-genome specific”, “mini-chromosome specific” and orthogroups that contain members that are present on both core- and mini-chromosomes. We found that the vast majority (99.98%) of conserved orthogroups were encoded exclusively on the core chromosomes or contained members on both core- and mini-chromosomes and only 0.02% were encoded exclusively on mini-chromosomes. Conversely, isolate-specific tribes were slightly more abundant on mini-chromosomes (S2 Table), substantiating the observation that mini-chromosomes are isolate-specific.

We further investigated the distribution of mini-chromosome encoded genes across M. oryzae lineages. We therefore extracted all gene models of genes that are exclusively present on mini-chromosomes and generated pairwise alignments to the 107 isolates described above using minimap2 [62]. In total, we used 305, 216, and 131 non-redundant gene models that are exclusive to the mini-chromosomes of FR13, US71, and CD156, respectively. We then extracted the best hit for each gene and filtered for completeness by applying a >90% query coverage filter. These analyses revealed variable patterns of gene conservation (both at sequence level and presence/absence polymorphisms) depending on the mini-chromosome (S9, S10 and S11 Figs). FR13 mini-chromosome genes were clearly more conserved across M. oryzae lineages than the other two gene sets. These analyses are consistent with the patterns of mini-chromosome sequence conservation described in earlier sections (Fig 4).

Mini-chromosomes contain highly dynamic effector and virulence-related loci

To determine functional categories of mini-chromosome encoded genes, we performed a Hidden Markov Model (HMM) scan against the Pfam database (https://pfam.xfam.org/) using a total of 772 non-redundant, mini-chromosome encoded proteins. More than 50% of these proteins (415) did not contain any known domain, whereas 357 proteins contained Pfam domains. Certain domains were shared between at least two mini-chromosomes and included transcription factor DNA-binding domains, especially Zn(2)-Cys(6) zinc-finger, DDE-superfamily endonuclease, Tc5 transposase DNA-binding, and Methyl-transferase domains as well as domains of unknown function, amino-acid permease, protein kinase, and glycosyl-hydrolase domains. However, the relative abundance of these domains varied between individual isolates (S3 Table) and it is unclear if the presence of these protein domains on the mini-chromosomes has functional implications.

The most abundant, isolate-specific domains on mini-chromosomes were present in the rice isolate FR13 and included cytochrome P450 and polyketide-synthase domains. Both of these domains are involved in pathogenicity in M. oryzae and other plant pathogens [17,63]. Interestingly, we identified a polyketide synthase as Ace1 (avirulence conferring enzyme 1), which is part of a large secondary metabolite cluster and triggers an immune response in host plants carrying the resistance gene Pi33 [63].

Virulence and host adaptation of M. oryzae are largely determined by genes encoding secreted effector proteins. To identify the degree to which secreted protein genes occur on mini-chromosomes, we predicted the secretome of all isolates using signalp 2.1 in combination with targetp and tmhmm to remove mitochondrial and transmembrane proteins (see Material and Methods). This resulted in 1,394, 1,558, and 1,611 secreted proteins in strains FR13, US71, and CD156, respectively. We found 50, 8, and 2 secreted proteins encoded on mini-chromosomes, most of which correspond to uncharacterized hypothetical proteins (S4 Table).

We further investigated whether candidate effector genes are present on the mini- and core-chromosomes using 27 characterized effectors and 167 predicted MAX-effectors (Magnaporthe AVRs and ToxB) identified by de Guillen et al. [64]. MAX-effectors represent a unique class of proteins that is expanded in M. oryzae and contain proteins that are sequence unrelated but share a similar core structural fold. Using tblastn, we identified 75, 67, and 63 proteins with similarity to known or predicted MAX-effectors in the genomes of FR13, US71, or CD156, respectively. Most of these genes were located on the core-chromosomes (S12 Fig). However, we found 5 genes in FR13 and 2 genes in US71 that were located on the mini-chromosomes. Interestingly, 3 of these genes were duplicated either on the same mini-chromosome or between the mini- and core chromosomes, suggesting structural, genomic rearrangements following segmental duplication events. Among the duplicated effector genes, we found the rice isolate specific effector AVR-Pik on the mini-chromosome of FR13 (S12A Fig). Interestingly, we found two genes encoding different variants, AVR-PikD and AVR-PikA, located towards both ends of the FR13 mini-chromosome scaffolds (S12A Fig). This is consistent with previous observations by Kusaba et al. [55], who identified the same effector variants on a 1.6 Mb mini-chromosome in the Japanese isolate 84R-62B and might indicate that certain mini-chromosomes are maintained in M. oryzae populations.

Patterns of genomic rearrangements around effector and virulence-related loci in mini-chromosomes

Our Pfam and effector analyses suggested that some virulence related genes, including AVR-Pik and Ace1, are located on mini-chromosomes and that these regions undergo rearrangements that possibly involve inter-chromosomal translocation events. To explore this further, we extracted the AVR-Pik and Ace1 loci from other highly contiguous genome assemblies of the related strains 70–15, FJ81278, and Guy11 and analyzed the macro-synteny of corresponding regions for signs of genomic rearrangements. AVR-Pik is present in the reference strain 70–15 and is encoded in the sub-telomeric region at the end of chromosome 2 (supercontig_8.2) and on contigs 13 and 21 in strains Guy11 and FJ81278, respectively. In strain 70–15 the AVR-Pik gene resides in the region that is syntenic to the 761 kb region on the mini-chromosome of FR13 described earlier. However, comparison of the corresponding region of Guy11 suggested large scale rearrangements and variable degrees of synteny around the AVR-Pik locus in different rice isolates (Fig 6). Additionally, we observed that the syntenic regions that are shared between the analyzed strains encode different variants of the AVR-Pik effector. Whereas the first syntenic region of the FR13 mini-chromosome encodes the variant AVR-PikA, syntenic regions in 70–15 and Guy11 encode the variant AVR-PikC. Furthermore, we identified a 82 kb region in isolate FJ81278 encoding AVR-PikD with high sequence similarity and synteny to the FR13 mini-chromosome scaffold 23 that encodes the same AVR-Pik variant, suggesting that the two copies of AVR-Pik on the mini-chromosome originated from independent genomic locations and recombined on the mini-chromosome.

Genomic rearrangements around virulence-related loci on mini-chromosomes.
Fig. 6. Genomic rearrangements around virulence-related loci on mini-chromosomes.
A) Synteny analysis around the AVR-Pik loci on the FR13 mini-chromosome and corresponding chromosomes and contigs in the related isolates Guy11, FJ81278, and the reference strain 70–15. The 761 kb region around the variant AVR-PikA on the mini-chromosome with high similarity to the end of chromosome 2 of the reference strain 70–15 is shown in purple. The makrosyntenic region between 70–15 and FR13 is disrupted on the mini-chromosome (synteny break between region 1 and 2). The synteny is disrupted earlier in Guy11 and there are 2 inversions around the AVR-Pik locus. Another syntenic region (82 kb) is present between the end of the mini-chromosome encoding the AVR-PikD variant and contig 21 of isolate FJ81278. Syntenic regions larger than 10 kb are shown. Illustration of supercontig 8.2 starts at 6 Mb for better visualization. B) Synteny analysis around the Ace1-containing secondary metabolite cluster on the FR13 mini-chromosome and corresponding contigs of isolates Guy11, FJ81278, 70–15, US71, and CD156. The Ace1 cluster is located at the end of the 761 kb syntenic region between the FR13 mini-chromosome and supercontig 8.2 of isolate 70–15. The synteny around the Ace1 locus is highly conserved in closely related isolates, including the foxtail millet isolate US71. In strains Guy11, US71, and 70–15 the cluster is located on core-chromosomes. The macro-synteny around the Ace1 cluster is disrupted by a 392 kb insertion on the FR13 mini-chromosome. The Ace1 cluster is shown in red and the two syntenic regions (761 kb and 164 kb) are shown in purple and yellow, respectively. Mini-chromosome scaffolds are highlighted in blue.

The polyketide synthase Ace1 is also located on the FR13 mini-chromosome. Ace1 is part of a large secondary metabolite cluster that spans a region of approximately 70 kb [63]. To analyze the genomic context around this cluster on the mini-chromosome, we extracted the gene sequences of the whole cluster in FR13 and analyzed syntenic regions in the aforementioned isolates as well as US71 and CD156. In rice isolates and the foxtail millet isolate US71, the Ace1 cluster and the order of the macrosyntenic region are well conserved (Fig 6B). Interestingly, the ACE1 cluster is encoded on core-chromosomes in strains 70–15, Guy11, and US71, based on the size of the contigs, suggesting inter-chromosomal rearrangements that involve core- and mini-chromosomes. In the more distantly related strain CD156, the Ace1 cluster is less conserved and the syntenic region only spans across 195 kb, reflecting the genetic diversity and possibly genomic rearrangements between rice isolates and distantly related lineages. Strikingly, the macrosyntenic region on the FR13 mini-chromosome is disrupted by a 392 kb insertion after the Ace1 cluster that is absent in the core-chromosomes of other isolates, further substantiating the hypothesis that mini-chromosomes undergo complex genomic rearrangements and might acquire isolate specific sequences.

Core-genomic rearrangements are associated with mini-chromosome emergence in M. oryzae

To further investigate the possible role of core-genomic rearrangements in mini-chromosome emergence, we compared the genome structure of all isolates to closely related reference genomes. In the case of FR13 and US71, the most closely related reference genome is 70–15. For CD156, we compared the genome structure to the chromosome quality reference assembly of the eleusine isolate MZ5-6-1 [65] in addition to 70–15. We identified several isolate-specific rearrangements in form of intra- and inter-chromosomal inversions and translocations (S13, S14 and S15 Figs). Most strikingly, we identified a major genomic rearrangement in the form of an intra-chromosomal inversion/translocation between core-chromosome 2 in 70–15 and scaffold 1 in FR13 that was directly adjacent to the syntenic region we identified between chromosome 2 and the mini-chromosome of FR13 (Figs 7A and S13) that was well supported by >100x nanopore read coverage (S16 Fig).

Core-genomic rearrangements are associated with mini-chromosome emergence.
Fig. 7. Core-genomic rearrangements are associated with mini-chromosome emergence.
A) Synteny analysis of 70–15 chromosome 2 and syntenic scaffolds and contigs in FR13, Guy11, and FJ81278. Syntenic regions between isolates are shown as genetic links in blue (alignments in forward direction) and red (reverse direction). Aligning regions are indicated as red and blue boxes. Scaffold and contig breaks are indicated as grey tones. The mini-chromosome scaffold 9 is shown in bright blue. Regions around the major rearrangement are numbered and indicated by colored boxes. B) Analysis of GC-content, gene-content, and repeat-content in regions i-iv surrounding the major rearrangement. Colors correspond to colors in (A). Axis limits for GC-content was set to 0.5–0.7. Axis limits for gene- and repeat-content was set to 0 / max and the center line represents the average of the contig. Gene- and repeat content is plotted as bp per 1kb sliding window. Gene and repeat models are plotted below in bright blue and bright red, respectively.

This association between a major core-genomic rearrangement and the split between core- and mini-chromosome in FR13 suggests that mini-chromosomes emerge through structural changes in the core genome. We further analyzed the gene-, repeat- and GC-content in the regions surrounding this rearrangement and found that blocks of repeat rich regions are associated with the observed rearrangements (Fig 7B), suggesting a role of repeats in facilitating both, core-genomic structural changes and emergence of mini-chromosomes. This finding is further supported by the observed duplication of the repeat-rich region of the core-genomic scaffold 2 in CD156 that is duplicated on the mini-chromosome (S4 and S6 Figs).

We also took advantage of the availability of high-quality genome assemblies of isolates 70–15, MZ5-1-6 and BR32, which do not carry mini-chromosomes, to further investigate the relationship between mini-chromosomes and core-chromosomes. We analyzed unfiltered alignments of the three mini-chromosomes to genome assemblies of isolates 70–15 (rice infecting lineage), MZ5-1-6 (eleusine infecting lineage) and BR32 (wheat infecting lineage). This analysis revealed that the FR13 mini-chromosome is the only one to form continuous alignments with core chromosome sequences (chromosome 2) of each of the tested isolates (S17 Fig). Conversely, US71 and CD156 mini-chromosome sequences only generated fragmented alignments of repetitive nature (S17 Fig).

M. oryzae mini-chromosomes contain canonical telomeres

Our observations along with the results obtained with the isolate B71 by Peng et al., 2019 [56] imply that sub-telomeric regions associated with rearrangements could contribute to mini-chromosome emergence. Therefore, we investigated the extent to which mini-chromosomes contain canonical telomeric repeats. We searched for canonical telomeric repeats in our assemblies after reordering the contigs according to the genomic structure of the reference genomes 70–15 and MZ5-6-1 using MAUVE [66]. We identified telomeric repeats in the isolates FR13 and US71, but not in CD156. In US71, we identified 10 scaffolds with telomeric repeats on one end of the scaffold. Co-linearity analysis to 70–15 placed these telomeres at one end of each core chromosome and to 3 small scaffolds that did not align to 70–15, including the mini-chromosome scaffold 21 (S14 Fig). We further identified 13 telomeres in isolate FR13, including two scaffolds that resemble complete chromosomes (S13 Fig). Interestingly, we found classical telomeric repeats at the end of both mini-chromosome scaffolds, indicating that mini-chromosomes are linear and that telomere and sub-telomere associated repeats are associated with mini-chromosome emergence.

Discussion

Genomes of eukaryotic plant pathogens are notorious for being highly dynamic. Chromosome scale structural variation, including supernumerary mini-chromosomes, has been documented by electrophoretic karyotyping [14] but has not been studied extensively at the sequence level mainly due to methodological limitations. Here, we took advantage of recent technical developments to reassess the genomes of 4 previously sequenced, host-specific isolates of the blast fungus M. oryzae. We used a combination of long- and short-read sequence data to generate near chromosome quality genome assemblies. We found that supernumerary mini-chromosomes are common in isolates of host-specific lineages of the blast fungus M. oryzae. We then used a technique we termed mini-chromosome isolation sequencing to collect short-read data from isolated mini-chromosomes and match them to scaffolds in the whole genome assemblies. We detected single mini-chromosomes in the rice and goosegrass isolates, and possibly two mini-chromosomes in the foxtail millet isolate of M. oryzae. Our study validates, complements and extends the findings of Peng et al. [56], which described mini-chromosomes in the wheat blast lineages of M. oryzae. Therefore, all major lineages of this pathogen carry mini-chromosomes and future genomics studies of the blast fungus pathogen will need to take this into account.

Comparative analyses of the mini-chromosomes sequences revealed that they are highly variable between isolates indicating that they may have emerged independently or that they have diverged rapidly after an ancient emergence event. Comparative analyses with core chromosomes indicate that the mini-chromosomes partially originate from rearrangements and segmental duplications of core-chromosomes. However, the mini-chromosomes share common features such as low gene and high repeat density. We also located several genes encoding secreted proteins on mini-chromosomes although the numbers varied between the three isolates. Due to the small sample size used in this study, we cannot at this point draw strong conclusions from these observations. However, our data suggest that mini-chromosomes emerge from core chromosome ends and the gene and repeat composition of the mini-chromosomes appears to reflect this origin.

We could not determine the precise structure of the US71 mini-chromosomes. Our results indicate that US71 mini-chromosome scaffolds contain at least two regions that are duplicated in the genome that were not resolved in the current assembly. It is generally challenging to assemble duplicated regions due to several technical reasons. It is possible that duplicated regions that are present on core- and mini-chromosomes in this isolate are simply hard to assemble separately. It is also possible that genome rearrangements have emerged during culturing and interfered with matching mini-chromosome reads to scaffolds. In the future, technical advances are needed to address this type of issues. For example, improving MCIS by including long-range sequencing of purified mini-chromosomes would lead to better mini-chromosome assemblies.

We located the genes for the effector AVR-Pik and the polyketide synthase Ace1 to the mini-chromosome of the rice-infecting isolate FR13 even though these genes are located on core-chromosomes in other isolates. Analyses of macrosynteny around these regions showed that mini-chromosomes undergo large-scale rearrangements, and thus, could contribute to genomic plasticity within M. oryzae populations. Additionally, we provide evidence that mini-chromosomes are associated with extensive rearrangements of core-chromosomes. Overall, our results demonstrate the value of mini-chromosome isolation sequencing (MCIS) as a scalable method to reliably identify mini-chromosomes in whole genome assemblies. This will allow us to study the biogenesis and biological relevance of this unique genomic compartment.

Our study, along with Peng et al. [56], reveals that mini-chromosomes are present in independent lineages of M. oryzae. Although we found mini-chromosomes in the examined rice, foxtail millet and goosegrass isolates of M. oryzae, we didn’t detect any in the wheat blast isolate BR32 (Fig 1), an isolate that traces back to early outbreaks of wheat blast in 1991. This is consistent with the recent study by Peng et al. [56], which documented mini-chromosomes in the wheat blast isolates B71 and P3 collected in 2012 but not in T25 collected in 1988. It is possible that wheat blast isolates collected soon after the emergence of this disease in the 1980s lack mini-chromosomes. The lack of meiotically unstable mini-chromosomes in these isolates may be due to sexual reproduction, which was common among isolates from the early phases of the epidemic [67]. Meiotic instability could also explain the lower degree of conservation of the FR13 mini-chromosome in the recombining lineage of rice blast isolates (S8). However, we cannot rule out the possibility that these isolates have lost their mini-chromosomes over time due to long term culturing under laboratory conditions. Similar loss of accessory chromosomes within weeks has been demonstrated in vitro for Z. tritici [20]. The observed variation in mini-chromosome content is consistent with earlier studies showing that the occurrence of mini-chromosomes is variable within and between lineages of M. oryzae [52,53].

The mini-chromosomes we studied share little sequence similarity with each other indicating that they are not conserved across host specific isolates but rather emerged independently or diversified more rapidly than core-chromosomes throughout lineage diversification of M. oryzae (Fig 3). In contrast, mapping of mini-chromosome derived reads of wheat isolate P3 to the B71 mini-chromosome sequence revealed several overlapping regions [56]. Despite the overlaps, these regions seem to be interspersed with sequences that are specific to each individual mini-chromosome. This is consistent with the view that mini-chromosomes can emerge frequently from rearrangements of core-chromosomes. Indeed, we detected significant similarity in whole genome alignments to the mini-chromosomes in isolates from several lineages (Fig 4). However, it is unclear to which extent the aligned sequences correspond to mini-chromosomes or to matching regions from core-chromosomes.

Our comparison of the FR13 mini-chromosome to high quality reference assemblies indicates that mini-chromosomal sequences match core chromosome regions (S17, S13 and S15 Figs). Interestingly, the matching core chromosome regions varied depending on the isolate. Whereas FR13 mini-chromosome matched the end of chromosome 2 in rice isolate 70–15, the eleusine isolate MZ5-1-6, and the triticum isolate BR32 (S17 Fig), it matched chromosome 1 (scaffold 08) in the eleusine isolate CD156 (S15 Fig). These observations are consistent with a model where mini-chromosomes and core chromosomes exchange sequences. However, more fine-tuned comparisons of closely related sibling isolates are necessary to refine this model and determine the frequency at which such exchanges occur. Future comparative analyses, notably mini-chromosome isolation sequencing of natural populations of M. oryzae, will shed light on the mechanisms of mini-chromosome emergence, maintenance and evolution.

Despite their independent origin, mini-chromosomes share common genetic features. We notice that elevated repeat content and lower gene densities are consistent features of mini-chromosomes (Fig 5) [56]. This is surprising given that all mini-chromosomes share overall little sequence similarity and seem to have emerged independently. What is the underlying mechanism that facilitates emergence of sequence unrelated mini-chromosomes with common genomic features? Our results suggest that mini-chromosomes might emerge from core genomic rearrangements involving primarily core-chromosome ends (Figs 6, 7 and S4). These regions are known to have higher repeat content and to be more dynamic than central regions of chromosomes [11,56,68]. It seems plausible that repeats are involved in mini-chromosome formation, a notion that is further supported by our observation that core genomic rearrangements and mini-chromosome emergence are associated with blocks of repetitive sequences (Fig 7B). Repeats facilitate genomic rearrangements, such as inter-chromosomal translocations, in several plant pathogenic fungi [6,11,20,69,70]. Under stress conditions, specific classes of transposable elements can get activated and induce genomic rearrangements [71]. Interestingly, Peng et al. [56] observed that the B71 mini-chromosome contains more active repeats than core chromosomes based on lower rates of repeat-induced point (RIP) mutations. The emerging model is that transposon activation generates genomic instability, primarily at core-chromosome ends, resulting in the genesis of mini-chromosomes. Future comparative analyses of mini-chromosomes from closely related isolates, ideally within the same clonal lineage, will further reveal the precise genetic elements associated with the emergence and divergence of mini-chromosomes.

What are the implications of mini-chromosomes for adaptive evolution of the blast fungus? Our results, together with other’s suggest that mini-chromosomes form a gene poor, repeat-rich genomic compartment that contributes to genome rearrangements and gene flow [11,55,56]. Given that effector genes are associated with mini-chromosomes in M. oryzae, this genomic architecture is another example of the two-speed genome concept in which particular compartments contribute to adaptive evolution. This could happen through several mechanisms. Mini-chromosomes may represent an intermediate stage of large rearrangements that facilitate generation of structural variations across the genome and might contribute to divergence and gene gains/losses of virulence related genes.

One hint about the adaptive nature of mini-chromosomes is the presence of AVR effector genes. Indeed, the FR13 1.7 Mb mini-chromosome has a similar size and architecture to a previously reported mini-chromosome of another rice-infecting isolate, 84R-62B [55]. Both FR13 and 84R-62B mini-chromosomes carry the AVR-PikA and AVR-PikD variants of the effector AVR-Pik. Kusaba et al. [55] demonstrated that the presence of each of the two effector variants on the 84R-62B mini-chromosome is associated with allele specific recognition in rice cultivars carrying the cognate variants of the immune receptor Pik. They further suggested that rearrangements between the mini- and core chromosomes, as well as mini-chromosome loss can lead to AVR-Pik presence/absence polymorphisms that determine virulence on Pik rice plants, thereby clearly demonstrating that genes on mini-chromosomes can impact virulence. Another effector, AVR-Pita, is also encoded on mini-chromosomes in various rice blast isolates and multiple independent rearrangement events are thought to have generated AVR-Pita containing mini-chromosomes [11].

A species such as M. oryzae that consists of genetically defined host-specific lineages may benefit from a process that facilitates horizontal transfer of genetic material. Genetically diverse isolates that infect a common host may give rise to new variants that increase the diversity and adaptive potential of local blast populations [72]. Future analyses are needed to determine the extent to which transfer of supernumerary chromosomes drives the evolution of M. oryzae as reported for other plant pathogenic fungi [19,27,55,73].

In conclusion, it is of utter importance to understand the biology of supernumerary mini-chromosomes and its impact on genomic diversity and gene flow. Our study lays the basis for studying the role of mini-chromosomes in defining the genetic identity of host specific lineages of M. oryzae. In the future we will integrate mini-chromosome sequencing into pangenome studies of M. oryzae to further our understanding on the genetic events that shape the evolution of host-specific lineages of M. oryzae.

Material and methods

Biological material

The M. oryzae isolates analyzed in this study were field isolates collected from different hosts and different regions and represent four host-adapted lineages. FR13 was isolated from japonica rice in France in 1988, US71 was isolated from Setaria sp. (foxtail millet) in the USA, CD156 was isolated from Eleusine indica (goosegrass) in Ferkessedougou, Ivory Coast in 1989, and BR32 was isolated from wheat in Brazil in 1991. All isolates were acquired from Elisabeth Fournier and have been previously reported in the GEMO project [48].

DNA extraction for whole genome sequencing and mini-chromosome isolation sequencing

For mycelium propagation and whole genome sequencing, M. oryzae isolates were cultured on complete medium agar (CM). High molecular weight genomic DNA from M. oryzae was extracted from mycelia of 7-days old cultures following the method described in [74]. Genomic DNA was quantified on a TapeStation (Agilent) and treated with DNAse-free RNAse. RNAse treated DNA was sheared using either a gTUBE or a 22 Gauge needle. Sheared DNA was captured using AMPure beads (Beckman Coulter, Indianapolis, US) and eluted in 45 μl water.

For mini-chromosome isolation sequencing, 8 blocks of 7-days old mycelium were transferred into 150 ml YG-medium (5g/L yeast extract, 20g/L glucose) and incubated at 24°C and 120 rpm for 3 days. Mycelium was harvested by filtering the culture through two layers of miracloth. Protoplasts were generated by incubation in sterile Trichoderma harzianum lysing enzymes solution (150 mg lysing enzymes in 15 mL 1 M Sorbitol) for 2–4 h. Protoplasts were harvested by filtering through two layers of miracloth followed by centrifugation for 10 min at 1,500 rpm and washed twice in 1 M Sorbitol. Quality of protoplasts was observed microscopically. Protoplasts were then resuspended in 100–200 μl 1 M Sorbitol / 50 mM EDTA, embedded in 2x volumes of 1% certified megabase agarose (Biorad) and incubated in proteinase K containing NDS buffer (10 mg/mL laurylsarcosine, 100 mM TRIS-HCl pH9.5, 500 mM EDTA, proteinase K 200 μg/ml) at 50°C for 48 h. Plugs were then washed three times with fresh 50 mM EDTA for 1 h prior to CHEF gel electrophoresis (detailed protocol available on protocols.io, [75]).

Whole genome sequencing and assembly

Libraries for whole genome sequencing were prepared by following the 1D protocol from Oxford Nanopore. Sequencing runs were performed using MinION R9.4 (Oxford Nanopore Technologies, Oxford, UK). Sequence reads were assembled into contigs using Canu (v1.6 and v1.7) [76]. Contiguity was further improved by merging highly similar contig ends with identity >98% and alignment length >10 kb (for three contigs the length of the alignment was between 8 kb and 10 kb) after whole genome alignments using the nucmer application of the MUMMER3 package [77] and SSPACE [78]. After extracting and merging matching contig ends, we tested for read support for both ends and reads spanning the entire region (S5 Table). We then improved base calling quality of the assemblies by applying a polishing pipeline (https://github.com/nanoporetech/ont-assembly-polish) consisting of two iterations of racon (https://github.com/isovic/racon; v1.3.2) and two iterations of pilon v1.22 [79] polishing using Nanopore and published Illumina reads (Illumina reads from [48]). To assess the performance of the polishing pipeline and the overall quality of the genome assemblies, we performed a benchmarking universal single-copy orthologs (BUSCO) [80] analysis using the Sordariomycota database (https://busco.ezlab.org/). Details about the assemblies, isolates, and accession numbers are available in [57]. Nanopore sequencing reads are deposited in the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) under the accession numbers ERR2612751 (BR32), ERR2612749 (FR13), ERR2612750 (US71), and ERR2612752 (CD156).

Mini-chromosome isolation, library preparation and sequencing

Mini-chromosomes of M. oryzae were separated from core-chromosomes by contour-clamped homogenous electric field (CHEF) gel electrophoresis. Therefore, plugs containing the digested protoplasts (see above) were placed in a 1% megabase agarose gel. We used 0.5% TAE buffer for subsequent DNA extraction or 0.5% TBE buffer for visualization (Fig 1). We separated mini-chromosomes using a Biorad CHEF DRII system with the following settings: Run time: 96 h; Voltage: 1.8–2 V/cm; Initial switch interval: 120 s; End switch interval: 3600 s. The gel was then dyed with ethidium bromide solution (1 μg/ml) for visualization on a UV-transilluminator and individual mini-chromosome bands were excised.

Mini-chromosomal DNA was eluted from the gel plugs by electroelution using a D-Tube dialyzer midi, MWCO 3.5 kD (Merck). Therefore, individual plugs were placed in the dialysis tube and covered with 0.5% TAE buffer. The mini-chromosomal DNA was electroeluted for 3h at 90 V, resuspended by slowly pipetting up and down and concentrated in a vacuum centrifugal evaporator to a concentration of 50–150 ng/μl. Concentration of the extracted DNA was measured spectrophotometrically and fluorometrically by Nanodrop and Qubit, respectively, prior to library preparation.

Libraries for mini-chromosome sequencing were generated following the general guidelines of the Nextera Flex library preparation kit (Illumina). We modified the protocol as follows. For tagmentation, we used a total volume of 5 μl consisting of 2.5 μl Tn5 transposase, 0.5 μl of 10x reaction buffer, and 2 μl mini-chromosomal DNA set to a concentration of 0.5 ng/μl. The tagmentation mix was incubated in a thermocycler at 55°C for 7 min. The tagmentation product was then used in a PCR reaction containing 2.5 μl custom barcoding primers (10 μM) (S6 Table), 25 μl 2x NEBNext High-fidelity PCR mix (New England Biolabs), and 15 μl H2O. PCR conditions: 72°C for 5 min, 98°C for 30 sec, 5 cycles of 98°C for 10 sec followed by 63°C for 30 sec and 72°C for 1 min. The numbers of amplification cycles needed for library preparation of each sample was then determined by quantitative PCR as follows: 25 μl SYBR Green Jumpstart Taq ReadyMic (Sigma-Aldrich), 5μl PCR product from previous reaction, 2.5 μl of each barcoding primer, 15 μl H2O. PCR conditions as described above, without the initial 72°C step. Same PCR conditions were then applied to amplify the tagmented DNA. Libraries were then cleaned up using AMPure PB Bead purification kit (Pacific Biosciences). Concentration and quality of the libraries was confirmed by Nanodrop, Qubit, and BioAnalyzer 2100 using the high sensitivity DNA Kit (Agilent Technologies). Sequencing of mini-chromosomal DNA libraries was carried out on a NextSeq 500 system (Illumina) using the NextSeq 500/550 Mid output Kit (Illumina). Mini-chromosome derived reads were deposited at the European nucleotide archive under the accession numbers ERR3771227-ERR3771238.

Identification of mini-chromosomes in whole genome assemblies

The quality of reads obtained from mini-chromosome isolation sequencing was confirmed with fastQC (https://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/fastqc/) and low quality sequences as well as adaptor sequences were removed using trimmomatic [81]. Mini-chromosome reads of each strain were then mapped against the whole genome assembly of the same strain using the BWA-mem (burrows-wheeler aligner) algorithm with default parameters. Reads were then filtered to keep only uniquely mapping reads using the samtools package [82] to prevent ambiguous mapping of reads originating from repeat rich regions. MCIS read coverage was calculated per 1 kb sliding window (window size: 1000 bp; slide: 500 bp) using the bedtools package (https://bedtools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) and plotted using the R package circlize [83]. Mini-chromosome coverage and repeat content used to generate circus plots are shown in S7 Table.

Read mapping against the reference assembly version 8 of strain 70–15 (ensemble release version 45) and visualization was carried out as described above. The number of reads mapping to the reference genome was calculated for total reads and uniquely mapping reads. Uniquely mapping reads were used for visualization to exclude ambiguous mapping sites. Total amount of mapping reads is reported as percentage of total reads per sample. The supercontig number in assembly version 8 of isolate 70–15 corresponds to the chromosome number and supercontig_8.8 contains unmapped sequence.

Whole genome and mini-chromosome alignments

Global alignments were generated using the nucmer algorithm of the MUMMER3 package [77]. The alignments were further filtered using the delta-filter utility (MUMMER3) with parameters -l 10000 and -i 80 (length >10 kb; percent identity >80%) to retrieve continuous alignments. Alignment coordinates were extracted with the show-coords utility and the output was modified to generate coordinate files in “bed” format for plotting in R. Plots were generated in R using the packages circlize [83], for circular representations of mini- and core-chromosome alignments, and karyoploteR [84], for linear representation of syntenic regions.

To calculate the breadth of coverage of whole genome alignments across several host specific lineages, all assemblies were aligned to the mini-chromosome contigs and selected core-chromosome contigs of the three isolates using nucmer. We then used the raw alignments and filtered alignments (length >5 kb) to generate coordinate files in “bed” format. Overlapping alignments were merged using bedtools v2.29.2 to generate non-redundant alignments for each mini-chromosome which were used to calculate the breadth of coverage relative to the total size of each mini-chromosome.

To calculate the breadth of coverage in the rice infecting lineage, each core chromosome or set of mini-chromosomes belonging to the same isolate was indexed using “bwa index”. We retrieved all trimmed Illumina reads from Latorre et al., 2020 [44] and mapped them to the different indexed contigs using bwa mem. PCR duplicates were marked using Picard Tools. Finally, we used the samtools depth function to calculate the breadths of coverage for at least 1X, for every contig without filtering for Mapping Quality (MQ0). The overall pipeline description is available at https://gitlab.com/smlatorreo/magnaporthe_minichromosomes.

Analysis of gene and repeat content

Gene models for all strains were retrieved from previous assemblies published via the Magnaporthe GEMO database ([48]; http://genome.jouy.inra.fr/gemo/). We then identified genes using a similarity-based approach. We used blastn [85] with all strain specific gene models to identify genes in our assemblies using a threshold of >90 query coverage and 99% identity to account for differences in base calling quality and sequencing errors between two assemblies of the same strain. The >90 coverage threshold was chosen to account for errors in mononucleotide repeats that can occur from nanopore sequencing and the 99% identity threshold was empirically determined by whole genome alignments of both assemblies of the same strain which resulted in an average sequence identity between 99% and 99.5%. Resulting genes were assigned to mini- and core-chromosome encoded. Gene density was calculated as number of features per 10 kb window across each genomic compartment (core- and mini-chromosomes).

To analyze gene presence/absence of mini-chromosome encoded genes across host-specific lineages of M. oryzae, we extracted all gene models that are exclusively present on the mini-chromosomes and aligned them to 107 publicly available genome assemblies representing 10 genetic lineages of M. oryzae and the outgroups PM1 (M. pennisetigena) and six M. grisea isolates using minimap2. We then extracted all best hits with a query coverage of >90% to retrieve conserved genes and plotted their similarity to the query [%] and used python (3.8.3) to plot coverage values as a heatmap, using the pandas library (1.0.4) for data handling, and matplotlib (3.2.1) and seaborn (0.11.0) libraries for plotting. The seaborn function ‘heatmap’ was used for basic heatmap generation, and ‘clustermap’ was used for the clustered x-axis heatmap.

Repetitive sequences were annotated with RepeatMasker (http://www.repeatmasker.org/) using a merged library of repeats consisting of the RepBase repeat library for fungi (https://www.girinst.org/repbase/) and Magnaporthe repeats identified by Chiapello et al. [48]. Total repeat content for the whole genome as well as for mini- and core-chromosome scaffolds was extracted from RepeatMasker.

For bootstrapping of gene and repeat content, we extracted the coordinates of features from the gene model blastn and RepeatMasker output. We then transformed the data into bed format for analysis in R. For each mini-chromosome scaffold, we sampled 10,000 random regions from the core genome with equal size to the respective mini-chromosome scaffold using the randomizeRegions function of the regionR package. We then determined the numbers of genes and the basepairs occupied by repeats for each core-chromosome fragment and the mini-chromosome scaffolds using the countOverlaps function of the GenomicRanges package. Density plots of the frequency of features per core-chromosome fragment were generated with the R package ggplot.

Prediction of secreted proteins

To predict secreted proteins, we retrieved the protein annotation of all strains from the Magnaporthe GEMO database ([48]; http://genome.jouy.inra.fr/gemo/). We then predicted proteins containing a signal peptide using the program SignalP v2.1 [86]. We then used TargetP-2.0 [87] to identify mitochondrial proteins and the hidden-markov model TMHMM [88] to identify proteins containing transmembrane domains. After removing mitochondrial and transmembrane proteins, we matched secreted proteins to the blastn output used to transfer gene models (described above) to determine the number and genomic location of secreted proteins in the nanopore/canu assemblies.

Pfam domain annotation

Pfam domains were predicted by a hidden-markov model scan using the Pfam protein families database ([89]; https://pfam.xfam.org/). Protein sequences were retrieved from the Magnaporthe GEMO database as described above. We used a total of 772 non-redundant, mini-chromosome encoded proteins for the analysis. These contain all mini-chromosome encoded proteins after removal of duplicated, identical sequences.

Predicting orthologous groups by TRIBE-MCL

Orthologous families were predicted using the software TRIBE-MCL [90]; http://micans.org/mcl/). We combined the proteomes of all strains and identified homologous proteins using blastp with a query coverage threshold of 90% and e-value of 10e^10. We then transform the blastp output into an MCL readable format using the mcxdeblast command of TRIBE-MCL and identify tribes by mcl and extracted tribes and protein identifiers using custom perl scripts. Of 12951 tribes predicted from the combined proteome retrieved from the GEMO Magnaporthe database, the members of 12900 matched the new assemblies with high coverage (>90%) and identity (>99%). Resulting tribes were then categorized into three groups: i) tribes that are conserved in all isolates, ii) tribes that are missing in one of the isolates, and iii) tribes only present in one isolate. Then, we assigned the genomic location of each of the tribe members as core-chromosome or mini-chromosome encoded, based on our mini-chromosome identification.

Supporting information

S1 Fig [mcis]
MCIS-read mapping and repeat content of . strain FR13.

S2 Fig [mcis]
MCIS-read mapping and repeat content of . strain US71.

S3 Fig [mcis]
MCIS-read mapping and repeat content of scaffolds < 2 Mb in . strain US71.

S4 Fig [mcis]
MCIS-read mapping and repeat content of . strain CD156.

S5 Fig [tif]
Nanopore sequencing read coverage of proposed mini-chromosome scaffolds in US71.

S6 Fig [tif]
The CD156 mini-chromosome contains duplicated sequences matching the subtelomeric region of core-chromosome scaffold 2.

S7 Fig [tif]
MCIS reads of FR13, US71, and US71 mapped against the reference genome of strain 70–15.

S8 Fig [tif]
Conservation of mini-chromosomal sequences within the rice-infecting genetic lineage of M. oryzae.

S9 Fig [tif]
Conservation of FR13 mini-chromosome encoded genes.

S10 Fig [tif]
Conservation of US71 mini-chromosome encoded genes.

S11 Fig [tif]
Conservation of CD156 mini-chromosome encoded genes.

S12 Fig [tif]
Known effector genes and predicted MAX-effectors are encoded on mini-chromosomes and can be duplicated between mini- and core-chromosomes.

S13 Fig [tif]
Genome structure and telomeres in FR13.

S14 Fig [tif]
Genome structure and telomeres in US71.

S15 Fig [tif]
Genome structure and telomeres in CD156.

S16 Fig [tif]
Nanopore coverage supporting the observed rearrangement between 70–15 chromosome 2 and FR13 scaffold 1.

S17 Fig [tif]
The sequence content of the FR13 mini-chromosome is partially conserved in core-chromosomes in isolates from various host-specific lineages.

S1 Table [xlsx]
Summary of gene and repeat content.

S2 Table [xlsx]
Conservation and genomic location of orthologous groups.

S3 Table [xlsx]
Summary of Pfam domain analysis.

S4 Table [xlsx]
Summary of secreted protein prediction.

S5 Table [xlsx]
Alignments and read support for merging of contigs.

S6 Table [xlsx]
Barcoding primers used for library preparation.

S7 Table [xlsx]
Coverage of mini-chromosome derived reads and repeat content.


Zdroje

1. Raffaele S, Win J, Cano LM, Kamoun S. Analyses of genome architecture and gene expression reveal novel candidate virulence factors in the secretome of Phytophthora infestans. BMC Genomics. 2010;11(1):637. doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-11-637 21080964

2. Dong S, Raffaele S, Kamoun S. The two-speed genomes of filamentous pathogens: waltz with plants. Curr Opin Genet Dev. 2015 Dec;35:57–65. doi: 10.1016/j.gde.2015.09.001 26451981

3. Croll D, McDonald BA. The Accessory Genome as a Cradle for Adaptive Evolution in Pathogens. Heitman J, editor. PLoS Pathog. 2012 Apr 26;8(4):e1002608. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002608 22570606

4. Kämper J, Kahmann R, Bölker M, Ma L-J, Brefort T, Saville BJ, et al. Insights from the genome of the biotrophic fungal plant pathogen Ustilago maydis. Nature. 2006 Nov;444(7115):97–101. doi: 10.1038/nature05248 17080091

5. Schirawski J, Mannhaupt G, Münch K, Brefort T, Schipper K, Doehlemann G, et al. Pathogenicity Determinants in Smut Fungi Revealed by Genome Comparison. Science. 2010 Dec 10;330(6010):1546–8. doi: 10.1126/science.1195330 21148393

6. de Jonge R, Bolton MD, Kombrink A, van den Berg GCM, Yadeta KA, Thomma BPHJ. Extensive chromosomal reshuffling drives evolution of virulence in an asexual pathogen. Genome Res. 2013 Aug 1;23(8):1271–82. doi: 10.1101/gr.152660.112 23685541

7. Armitage AD, Taylor A, Sobczyk MK, Baxter L, Greenfield BPJ, Bates HJ, et al. Characterisation of pathogen-specific regions and novel effector candidates in Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cepae. Sci Rep. 2018 Dec;8(1):13530.

8. Bertazzoni S, Williams AH, Jones DA, Syme RA, Tan K-C, Hane JK. Accessories Make the Outfit: Accessory Chromosomes and Other Dispensable DNA Regions in Plant-Pathogenic Fungi. Mol Plant Microbe Interact. 2018 Aug;31(8):779–88. doi: 10.1094/MPMI-06-17-0135-FI 29664319

9. Goodwin SB, Ben M’Barek S, Dhillon B, Wittenberg AHJ, Crane CF, Hane JK, et al. Finished Genome of the Fungal Wheat Pathogen Mycosphaerella graminicola Reveals Dispensome Structure, Chromosome Plasticity, and Stealth Pathogenesis. Malik HS, editor. PLoS Genet. 2011 Jun 9;7(6):e1002070. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002070 21695235

10. Fokkens L, Shahi S, Connolly LR, Stam R, Schmidt SM, Smith KM, et al. The multi-speed genome of Fusarium oxysporum reveals association of histone modifications with sequence divergence and footprints of past horizontal chromosome transfer events [Internet]. Genomics; 2018 Nov [cited 2019 Dec 17]. Available from: http://biorxiv.org/lookup/doi/10.1101/465070.

11. Chuma I, Isobe C, Hotta Y, Ibaragi K, Futamata N, Kusaba M, et al. Multiple Translocation of the AVR-Pita Effector Gene among Chromosomes of the Rice Blast Fungus Magnaporthe oryzae and Related Species. Tyler B, editor. PLoS Pathog. 2011 Jul 28;7(7):e1002147. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002147 21829350

12. Frantzeskakis L, Kusch S, Panstruga R. The need for speed: compartmentalized genome evolution in filamentous phytopathogens: Multiple “speeds” in phytopathogen genomes. Mol Plant Pathol. 2019 Jan;20(1):3–7. doi: 10.1111/mpp.12738 30557450

13. Zolan ME. Chromosome-Length Polymorphism in Fungi. MICROBIOL REV. 1995;59:13. 8531892

14. Covert SF. Supernumerary chromosomes in filamentous fungi. Curr Genet. 1998 Jun 8;33(5):311–9. doi: 10.1007/s002940050342 9618581

15. Jones RN, Viegas W, Houben A. A Century of B Chromosomes in Plants: So What? Ann Bot. 2008 Mar 13;101(6):767–75. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcm167 17704238

16. Möller M, Stukenbrock EH. Evolution and genome architecture in fungal plant pathogens. Nat Rev Microbiol. 2017 Dec;15(12):756–71. doi: 10.1038/nrmicro.2017.76 28781365

17. Miao V, Covert S, VanEtten H. A fungal gene for antibiotic resistance on a dispensable (“B”) chromosome. Science. 1991 Dec 20;254(5039):1773–6. doi: 10.1126/science.1763326 1763326

18. Balesdent M-H, Fudal I, Ollivier B, Bally P, Grandaubert J, Eber F, et al. The dispensable chromosome of Leptosphaeria maculans shelters an effector gene conferring avirulence towards Brassica rapa. New Phytol. 2013 May;198(3):887–98. doi: 10.1111/nph.12178 23406519

19. Ma L-J, van der Does HC, Borkovich KA, Coleman JJ, Daboussi M-J, Di Pietro A, et al. Comparative genomics reveals mobile pathogenicity chromosomes in Fusarium. Nature. 2010 Mar;464(7287):367–73. doi: 10.1038/nature08850 20237561

20. Möller M, Habig M, Freitag M, Stukenbrock EH. Extraordinary Genome Instability and Widespread Chromosome Rearrangements During Vegetative Growth. Genetics. 2018 Oct 1;210(2):517. doi: 10.1534/genetics.118.301050 30072376

21. Fouché S, Plissonneau C, McDonald BA, Croll D. Meiosis Leads to Pervasive Copy-Number Variation and Distorted Inheritance of Accessory Chromosomes of the Wheat Pathogen Zymoseptoria tritici. Rose L, editor. Genome Biol Evol. 2018 Jun 1;10(6):1416–29. doi: 10.1093/gbe/evy100 29850789

22. Habig M, Kema GH, Holtgrewe Stukenbrock E. Meiotic drive of female-inherited supernumerary chromosomes in a pathogenic fungus. Rokas A, Weigel D, editors. eLife. 2018 Dec 13;7:e40251.

23. Raffaele S, Kamoun S. Genome evolution in filamentous plant pathogens: why bigger can be better. Nat Rev Microbiol. 2012 Jun;10(6):417–30. doi: 10.1038/nrmicro2790 22565130

24. Coleman JJ, Rounsley SD, Rodriguez-Carres M, Kuo A, Wasmann CC, Grimwood J, et al. The Genome of Nectria haematococca: Contribution of Supernumerary Chromosomes to Gene Expansion. Madhani HD, editor. PLoS Genet. 2009 Aug 28;5(8):e1000618. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1000618 19714214

25. Akagi Y, Taga M, Yamamoto M, Tsuge T, Fukumasa-Nakai Y, Otani H, et al. Chromosome constitution of hybrid strains constructed by protoplast fusion between the tomato and strawberry pathotypes of Alternaria alternata. J Gen Plant Pathol. 2009 Apr;75(2):101–9.

26. Vanheule A, Audenaert K, Warris S, van de Geest H, Schijlen E, Höfte M, et al. Living apart together: crosstalk between the core and supernumerary genomes in a fungal plant pathogen. BMC Genomics. 2016 Dec;17(1):670.

27. He C, Rusu AG, Poplawski AM, Irwin JA, Manners JM. Transfer of a supernumerary chromosome between vegetatively incompatible biotypes of the fungus Colletotrichum gloeosporioides. Genetics. 1998 Dec;150(4):1459–66. 9832523

28. Fisher MC, Henk Daniel A, Briggs CJ, Brownstein JS, Madoff LC, McCraw SL, et al. Emerging fungal threats to animal, plant and ecosystem health. Nature. 2012 Apr;484(7393):186–94. doi: 10.1038/nature10947 22498624

29. Savary S, Willocquet L, Pethybridge SJ, Esker P, McRoberts N, Nelson A. The global burden of pathogens and pests on major food crops. Nat Ecol Evol. 2019 Mar;3(3):430–9. doi: 10.1038/s41559-018-0793-y 30718852

30. Hill L, Jones G, Atkinson N, Hector A, Hemery G, Brown N. The £15 billion cost of ash dieback in Britain. Curr Biol. 2019 May;29(9):R315–6. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.03.033 31063720

31. Grünwald NJ, LeBoldus JM, Hamelin RC. Ecology and Evolution of the Sudden Oak Death Pathogen Phytophthora ramorum. Annu Rev Phytopathol. 2019 Aug 25;57(1):301–21. doi: 10.1146/annurev-phyto-082718-100117 31226018

32. Białas A, Zess EK, De la Concepcion JC, Franceschetti M, Pennington HG, Yoshida K, et al. Lessons in Effector and NLR Biology of Plant-Microbe Systems. Mol Plant Microbe Interact. 2018 Jan;31(1):34–45. doi: 10.1094/MPMI-08-17-0196-FI 29144205

33. Lo Presti L, Lanver D, Schweizer G, Tanaka S, Liang L, Tollot M, et al. Fungal Effectors and Plant Susceptibility. Annu Rev Plant Biol. 2015 Apr 29;66(1):513–45. doi: 10.1146/annurev-arplant-043014-114623 25923844

34. Kanzaki H, Yoshida K, Saitoh H, Fujisaki K, Hirabuchi A, Alaux L, et al. Arms race co-evolution of Magnaporthe oryzae AVR-Pik and rice Pik genes driven by their physical interactions: Co-evolution of fungal and rice genes. Plant J. 2012 Dec;72(6):894–907. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2012.05110.x 22805093

35. Yoshida K, Saunders DGO, Mitsuoka C, Natsume S, Kosugi S, Saitoh H, et al. Host specialization of the blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae is associated with dynamic gain and loss of genes linked to transposable elements. BMC Genomics. 2016 Dec;17(1):370. doi: 10.1186/s12864-016-2690-6 27194050

36. Jones JDG, Vance RE, Dangl JL. Intracellular innate immune surveillance devices in plants and animals. Science. 2016 Dec 2;354(6316):aaf6395–aaf6395. doi: 10.1126/science.aaf6395 27934708

37. Cesari S. Multiple strategies for pathogen perception by plant immune receptors. New Phytol. 2018 Jul;219(1):17–24. doi: 10.1111/nph.14877 29131341

38. Dean R, Van Kan JAL, Pretorius ZA, Hammond-Kosack KE, Di Pietro A, Spanu PD, et al. The Top 10 fungal pathogens in molecular plant pathology: Top 10 fungal pathogens. Mol Plant Pathol. 2012 May;13(4):414–30. doi: 10.1111/j.1364-3703.2011.00783.x 22471698

39. Ou SH. A look at worldwide rice blast disease control. Plant Disease. 1980;64:439–45.

40. Kato H, Yamamoto M, Yamaguchi-Ozaki T, kadouchi H, Iwamoto Y, Nakayashiki H, et al. Pathogenicity, Mating Ability and DNA Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphisms of Pyricularia Populations Isolated from Gramineae, Bambusideae and Zingiberaceae Plants. J Gen Plant Pathol. 2000 Feb 1;66(1):30–47.

41. Gladieux P, Condon B, Ravel S, Soanes D, Maciel JLN, Nhani A, et al. Gene Flow between Divergent Cereal- and Grass-Specific Lineages of the Rice Blast Fungus Magnaporthe oryzae. Taylor JW, editor. mBio. 2018 Feb 27;9(1):e01219–17. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01219-17 29487238

42. Gladieux P, Ravel S, Rieux A, Cros-Arteil S, Adreit H, Milazzo J, et al. Coexistence of Multiple Endemic and Pandemic Lineages of the Rice Blast Pathogen. Guttman D, editor. mBio. 2018 Apr 3;9(2):e01806–17, /mbio/9/2/mBio.01806-17.atom.

43. Zhong Z, Chen M, Lin L, Han Y, Bao J, Tang W, et al. Population genomic analysis of the rice blast fungus reveals specific events associated with expansion of three main clades. ISME J. 2018 Aug;12(8):1867–78. doi: 10.1038/s41396-018-0100-6 29568114

44. Latorre SM, Reyes-Avila CS, Malmgren A, Win J, Kamoun S, Burbano HA. Differential loss of effector genes in three recently expanded pandemic clonal lineages of the rice blast fungus. BMC Biol. 2020 Jul 16;18(1):88. doi: 10.1186/s12915-020-00818-z 32677941

45. Islam MT, Croll D, Gladieux P, Soanes DM, Persoons A, Bhattacharjee P, et al. Emergence of wheat blast in Bangladesh was caused by a South American lineage of Magnaporthe oryzae. BMC Biol. 2016 Dec;14(1):84. doi: 10.1186/s12915-016-0309-7 27716181

46. Islam MT, Kim K-H, Choi J. Wheat Blast in Bangladesh: The Current Situation and Future Impacts. Plant Pathol J. 2019 Feb 1;35(1):1–10. doi: 10.5423/PPJ.RW.08.2018.0168 30828274

47. Malaker PK, Barma NCD, Tiwari TP, Collis WJ, Duveiller E, Singh PK, et al. First Report of Wheat Blast Caused by Magnaporthe oryzae Pathotype triticum in Bangladesh. Plant Dis. 2016 Nov;100(11):2330–2330.

48. Chiapello H, Mallet L, Guérin C, Aguileta G, Amselem J, Kroj T, et al. Deciphering Genome Content and Evolutionary Relationships of Isolates from the Fungus Magnaporthe oryzae Attacking Different Host Plants. Genome Biol Evol. 2015 Oct;7(10):2896–912. doi: 10.1093/gbe/evv187 26454013

49. Inoue Y, Vy TTP, Yoshida K, Asano H, Mitsuoka C, Asuke S, et al. Evolution of the wheat blast fungus through functional losses in a host specificity determinant. Science. 2017;357(6346):80–3. doi: 10.1126/science.aam9654 28684523

50. Tosa Y, Osue J, Eto Y, Oh H-S, Nakayashiki H, Mayama S, et al. Evolution of an Avirulence Gene, AVR1-CO39, Concomitant with the Evolution and Differentiation of Magnaporthe oryzae. Mol Plant Microbe Interact. 2005 Nov;18(11):1148–60. doi: 10.1094/MPMI-18-1148 16353550

51. Stukenbrock EH. Evolution, selection and isolation: a genomic view of speciation in fungal plant pathogens. New Phytol. 2013 Sep;199(4):895–907. doi: 10.1111/nph.12374 23782262

52. Talbot NJ, Salch YP, Ma M, Hamer JE. Karyotypic variation within clonal lineages of rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea. APPL Env MICROBIOL. 1993;59(2):585–93. doi: 10.1128/AEM.59.2.585-593.1993 16348876

53. Orbach MJ, Chumley FG, Valent B. Electrophoretic karyotypes of Magnaporthe grisea pathogens of diverse grasses. MPMI. 1996;9(4):261–71.

54. Luo C-X, Yin L-F, Ohtaka K, Kusaba M. The 1.6Mb chromosome carrying the avirulence gene AvrPik in Magnaporthe oryzae isolate 84R-62B is a chimera containing chromosome 1 sequences. Mycol Res. 2007 Feb;111(2):232–9. doi: 10.1016/j.mycres.2006.10.008 17188484

55. Kusaba M, Mochida T, Naridomi T, Fujita Y, Chuma I, Tosa Y. Loss of a 1.6 Mb chromosome in Pyricularia oryzae harboring two alleles of AvrPik leads to acquisition of virulence to rice cultivars containing resistance alleles at the Pik locus. Curr Genet. 2014 Nov;60(4):315–25. doi: 10.1007/s00294-014-0437-y 25056242

56. Peng Z, Oliveira-Garcia E, Lin G, Hu Y, Dalby M, Migeon P, et al. Effector gene reshuffling involves dispensable mini-chromosomes in the wheat blast fungus. Lin X, editor. PLOS Genet. 2019 Sep 12;15(9):e1008272. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008272 31513573

57. Win J, Chanclud E, Reyes-Avila S, Langner T, Islam MT, Kamoun S. Nanopore sequencing of genomic DNA from Magnaporthe oryzae isolates from different hosts. Zenodo [Internet]. 2019 Feb 14 [cited 2019 Dec 17]; Available from: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2564950.

58. Dean RA, Talbot NJ, Ebbole DJ, Farman ML, Mitchell TK, Orbach MJ, et al. The genome sequence of the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea. Nature. 2005 Apr;434(7036):980–6. doi: 10.1038/nature03449 15846337

59. Soanes Darren, Antonio Nhani João L. Nunes Maciel Jr, Nicholas J Talbot. Genome assemblies of Magnaporthe oryzae [Internet]. 2017. Available from: https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Genome_assemblies_of_Magnaporthe_oryzae/5231485.

60. Soanes Darren, Ryder Lauren S., M. Tofazzal Islam, Nicholas J. Talbot. Genome assemblies of Magnaporthe oryzae isolated from Bangladesh in 2016 and 2017 [Internet]. 2017. Available from: https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Genome_assemblies_of_Magnaporthe_oryzae_isolated_from_Bangladesh_in_2016_and_2017/5236381.

61. Thierry M, Milazzo J, Adreit H, Ravel S, Borron S, Sella V, et al. Ecological Differentiation and Incipient Speciation in the Fungal Pathogen Causing Rice Blast. bioRxiv. 2020 Jan 1;2020.06.02.129296.

62. Li H. Minimap2: pairwise alignment for nucleotide sequences. Bioinformatics. 2018 Sep 15;34(18):3094–100. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/bty191 29750242

63. Collemare J, Pianfetti M, Houlle A-E, Morin D, Camborde L, Gagey M-J, et al. Magnaporthe grisea avirulence gene ACE1 belongs to an infection-specific gene cluster involved in secondary metabolism. New Phytol. 2008 Jul;179(1):196–208. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2008.02459.x 18433432

64. de Guillen K, Ortiz-Vallejo D, Gracy J, Fournier E, Kroj T, Padilla A. Structure Analysis Uncovers a Highly Diverse but Structurally Conserved Effector Family in Phytopathogenic Fungi. Xu J-R, editor. PLOS Pathog. 2015 Oct 27;11(10):e1005228. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1005228 26506000

65. Gómez Luciano LB, Tsai IJ, Chuma I, Tosa Y, Chen Y-H, Li J-Y, et al. Blast Fungal Genomes Show Frequent Chromosomal Changes, Gene Gains and Losses, and Effector Gene Turnover. Mol Biol Evol. 2019 Mar 5;36(6):1148–61. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msz045 30835262

66. Rissman AI, Mau B, Biehl BS, Darling AE, Glasner JD, Perna NT. Reordering contigs of draft genomes using the Mauve aligner. Bioinforma Oxf Engl. 2009 Aug 15;25(16):2071–3.

67. Cruz CD, Valent B. Wheat blast disease: danger on the move. Trop Plant Pathol. 2017 Jun;42(3):210–22.

68. Yadav V, Yang F, Reza MdH, Liu S, Valent B, Sanyal K, et al. Cellular Dynamics and Genomic Identity of Centromeres in Cereal Blast Fungus. Idnurm A, editor. mBio. 2019 Jul 30;10(4):e01581–19, /mbio/10/4/mBio.01581-19.atom. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01581-19 31363034

69. Faino L, Seidl MF, Shi-Kunne X, Pauper M, van den Berg GCM, Wittenberg AHJ, et al. Transposons passively and actively contribute to evolution of the two-speed genome of a fungal pathogen. Genome Res. 2016 Aug;26(8):1091–100. doi: 10.1101/gr.204974.116 27325116

70. Depotter JRL, Shi-Kunne X, Missonnier H, Liu T, Faino L, van den Berg GCM, et al. Dynamic virulence-related regions of the fungal plant pathogen Verticillium dahliae display remarkably enhanced sequence conservation [Internet]. Microbiology; 2018 Mar [cited 2019 Dec 17]. Available from: http://biorxiv.org/lookup/doi/10.1101/277558.

71. Fouché S, Badet T, Oggenfuss U, Plissonneau C, Francisco CS, Croll D. Stress-Driven Transposable Element De-repression Dynamics and Virulence Evolution in a Fungal Pathogen. Mol Biol Evol [Internet]. 2019 Sep 23 [cited 2019 Dec 18];(msz216). Available from: https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msz216.

72. Langner T, Białas A, Kamoun S. The Blast Fungus Decoded: Genomes in Flux. mBio. 2018 Apr 17;9(2):e00571–18. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00571-18 29666287

73. Mehrabi R, Bahkali AH, Abd-Elsalam KA, Moslem M, Ben M’Barek S, Gohari AM, et al. Horizontal gene and chromosome transfer in plant pathogenic fungi affecting host range. FEMS Microbiol Rev. 2011 May;35(3):542–54. doi: 10.1111/j.1574-6976.2010.00263.x 21223323

74. Schwessinger B. High quality DNA from Fungi for long read sequencing e.g. PacBio v10 (protocols.io.ewtbfen) [Internet]. [cited 2019 Dec 17]. Available from: https://www.protocols.io/view/High-quality-DNA-from-Fungi-for-long-read-sequenci-ewtbfen.

75. Langner T, Harant A, Kamoun S. Isolation of supernumerary mini-chromosomes from fungi for enrichment sequencing. protocols.io [Internet]. 2019 Dec 17 [cited 2019 Dec 18]; Available from: dx.doi.org/10.17504/protocols.io.9t7h6rn.

76. Koren S, Walenz BP, Berlin K, Miller JR, Bergman NH, Phillippy AM. Canu: scalable and accurate long-read assembly via adaptive k -mer weighting and repeat separation. Genome Res. 2017 May;27(5):722–36. doi: 10.1101/gr.215087.116 28298431

77. Kurtz S, Phillippy A, Delcher AL, Smoot M, Shumway M, Antonescu C, et al. Versatile and open software for comparing large genomes. Genome Biol. 2004;9. doi: 10.1186/gb-2004-5-2-r12 14759262

78. Boetzer M, Henkel CV, Jansen HJ, Butler D, Pirovano W. Scaffolding pre-assembled contigs using SSPACE. Bioinformatics. 2011 Feb 15;27(4):578–9. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btq683 21149342

79. Walker BJ, Abeel T, Shea T, Priest M, Abouelliel A, Sakthikumar S, et al. Pilon: An Integrated Tool for Comprehensive Microbial Variant Detection and Genome Assembly Improvement. Wang J, editor. PLoS ONE. 2014 Nov 19;9(11):e112963. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0112963 25409509

80. Simão FA, Waterhouse RM, Ioannidis P, Kriventseva EV, Zdobnov EM. BUSCO: assessing genome assembly and annotation completeness with single-copy orthologs. Bioinformatics. 2015 Oct 1;31(19):3210–2. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btv351 26059717

81. Bolger AM, Lohse M, Usadel B. Trimmomatic: a flexible trimmer for Illumina sequence data. Bioinformatics. 2014 Aug 1;30(15):2114–20. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btu170 24695404

82. Li H, Handsaker B, Wysoker A, Fennell T, Ruan J, Homer N, et al. The Sequence Alignment/Map format and SAMtools. Bioinformatics. 2009 Aug 15;25(16):2078–9. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btp352 19505943

83. Gu Z, Gu L, Eils R, Schlesner M, Brors B. circlize implements and enhances circular visualization in R. Bioinformatics. 2014 Oct;30(19):2811–2. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btu393 24930139

84. Gel B, Serra E. karyoploteR: an R/Bioconductor package to plot customizable genomes displaying arbitrary data. Hancock J, editor. Bioinformatics. 2017 Oct 1;33(19):3088–90. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btx346 28575171

85. Altschul SF, Gish W, Miller W, Myers EW, Lipman DJ. Basic local alignment search tool. J Mol Biol. 1990 Oct 5;215(3):403–10. doi: 10.1016/S0022-2836(05)80360-2 2231712

86. Nielsen H, Engelbrecht J, Brunak S, von Heijne G. Identification of prokaryotic and eukaryotic signal peptides and prediction of their cleavage sites. Protein Eng Des Sel. 1997 Jan 1;10(1):1–6.

87. Emanuelsson O, Brunak S, von Heijne G, Nielsen H. Locating proteins in the cell using TargetP, SignalP and related tools. Nat Protoc. 2007 Apr;2(4):953–71. doi: 10.1038/nprot.2007.131 17446895

88. Krogh A, Larsson B, von Heijne G, Sonnhammer ELL. Predicting transmembrane protein topology with a hidden markov model: application to complete genomes11Edited by F. Cohen. J Mol Biol. 2001 Jan;305(3):567–80. doi: 10.1006/jmbi.2000.4315 11152613

89. El-Gebali S, Mistry J, Bateman A, Eddy SR, Luciani A, Potter SC, et al. The Pfam protein families database in 2019. Nucleic Acids Res. 2019 Jan 8;47(D1):D427–32. doi: 10.1093/nar/gky995 30357350

90. Enright AJ. An efficient algorithm for large-scale detection of protein families. Nucleic Acids Res. 2002 Apr 1;30(7):1575–84. doi: 10.1093/nar/30.7.1575 11917018


Článek vyšel v časopise

PLOS Genetics


2021 Číslo 2
Nejčtenější tento týden
Nejčtenější v tomto čísle
Kurzy Podcasty Doporučená témata Časopisy
Přihlášení
Zapomenuté heslo

Zadejte e-mailovou adresu, se kterou jste vytvářel(a) účet, budou Vám na ni zaslány informace k nastavení nového hesla.

Přihlášení

Nemáte účet?  Registrujte se

#ADS_BOTTOM_SCRIPTS#