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The obligate alkalophilic soda-lake fungus Sodiomyces alkalinus has shifted to a protein diet

Authors
Grum-Grzhimaylo, Alexey A.Falkoski, Daniel L.van den Heuvel, JoostValero-Jimenez, Claudio A.Min, ByoungnamChoi, In-GeolLipzen, AnnaDaum, Chris G.Aanen, Duur K.Tsang, AdrianHenrissat, BernardBilanenko, Elena N.de Vries, Ronald P.van Kan, Jan A. L.Grigoriev, Igor V.Debets, Alfons J. M.
Issue Date
12월-2018
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
alkalophilic fungus; brine shrimps; enzymes; HGT; prokaryotes; Sodiomyces alkalinus
Citation
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, v.27, no.23, pp.4808 - 4819
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume
27
Number
23
Start Page
4808
End Page
4819
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/71378
DOI
10.1111/mec.14912
ISSN
0962-1083
Abstract
Sodiomyces alkalinus is one of the very few alkalophilic fungi, adapted to grow optimally at high pH. It is widely distributed at the plant-deprived edges of extremely alkaline lakes and locally abundant. We sequenced the genome of S. alkalinus and reconstructed evolution of catabolic enzymes, using a phylogenomic comparison. We found that the genome of S. alkalinus is larger, but its predicted proteome is smaller and heavily depleted of both plant-degrading enzymes and proteinases, when compared to its closest plant-pathogenic relatives. Interestingly, despite overall losses, S. alkalinus has retained many proteinases families and acquired bacterial cell wall-degrading enzymes, some of them via horizontal gene transfer from bacteria. This fungus has very potent proteolytic activity at high pH values, but slowly induced low activity of cellulases and hemicellulases. Our experimental and in silico data suggest that plant biomass, a common food source for most fungi, is not a preferred substrate for S. alkalinus in its natural environment. We conclude that the fungus has abandoned the ancestral plant-based diet and has become specialized in a more protein-rich food, abundantly available in soda lakes in the form of prokaryotes and small crustaceans.
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