Project description:Rhizoctonia solani Kühn is a soilborne basidiomycetous fungus that causes significant damage to many economically important crops. R. solani isolates are classified into 13 Anastomosis Groups (AGs) with interspecific subgroups having distinctive morphology, pathogenicity and wide host range. However, the genetic factors that drive the unique fungal pathology are still not well characterized due to the limited number of available annotated genomes. Therefore, we performed genome sequencing, assembly, annotation and functional analysis of 13 R. solani isolates covering 7 AGs and selected subgroups (AG1-IA, AG1-IB, AG1-IC, AG2-2IIIB, AG3-PT, AG3-TB, AG4-HG-I, AG5, AG6, and AG8). Here, we report a pangenome comparative analysis of 13 R. solani isolates covering important groups to elucidate unique and common attributes associated with each isolate, including molecular factors potentially involved in determining AG-specific host preference. Finally, we present the largest repertoire of annotated R. solani genomes, compiled as a comprehensive and user-friendly database, viz. RsolaniDB. Since 7 genomes are reported for the first time, the database stands as a valuable platform for formulating new hypotheses by hosting annotated genomes, with tools for functional enrichment, orthologs and sequence analysis, currently not available with other accessible state-of-the-art platforms hosting Rhizoctonia genome sequences.
Project description:The basidiomycete Moniliophthora roreri causes frosty pod rot of cacao (Theobroma cacao) in the Western hemisphere. M. roreri is considered asexual and haploid throughout its hemibiotrophic lifecycle. To understand the processes driving genome modification, using long-read sequencing technology we sequenced and assembled five high quality M. roreri genomes out of a collection of ninety-nine isolates collected throughout the pathogen's range. We obtained chromosome-scale assemblies composed of eleven scaffolds. We used short-read technology to sequence the genomes of twenty-two similarly chosen isolates. Alignments among the five reference assemblies revealed inversions and segmental translocations and duplications between and within scaffolds. Isolates at the front of the pathogens’ expanding range tend to share lineage-specific structural variants, as confirmed by short-read sequencing. We identified, for the first time, three new mating type A locus alleles (five in total) and one new potential mating type B locus allele (three in total). Currently only two mating type combinations, A1B1 and A2B2, are known to exist outside of Colombia. A systematic survey of the M. roreri transcriptome across twenty-two isolates identified an expanded candidate effector pool and provided evidence that effector candidate genes unique to the Moniliophthoras have been selected for preferential expression during the biotrophic phase of disease. Notably, M. roreri isolates in Costa Rica carry a chromosome segment duplication that has doubled the associated gene complement and includes secreted proteins and candidate effectors. Clonal propagation of the haploid M. roreri genome has allowed lineages with unique genome structures and compositions to dominate as it expands its range, displaying a significant founder effect.
Project description:The basidiomycete Moniliophthora roreri causes frosty pod rot of cacao (Theobroma cacao) in the Western hemisphere. M. roreri is considered asexual and haploid throughout its hemibiotrophic lifecycle. To understand the processes driving genome modification, using long-read sequencing technology we sequenced and assembled five high quality M. roreri genomes out of a collection of ninety-nine isolates collected throughout the pathogen's range. We obtained chromosome-scale assemblies composed of eleven scaffolds. We used short-read technology to sequence the genomes of twenty-two similarly chosen isolates. Alignments among the five reference assemblies revealed inversions and segmental translocations and duplications between and within scaffolds. Isolates at the front of the pathogens’ expanding range tend to share lineage-specific structural variants, as confirmed by short-read sequencing. We identified, for the first time, three new mating type A locus alleles (five in total) and one new potential mating type B locus allele (three in total). Currently only two mating type combinations, A1B1 and A2B2, are known to exist outside of Colombia. A systematic survey of the M. roreri transcriptome across twenty-two isolates identified an expanded candidate effector pool and provided evidence that effector candidate genes unique to the Moniliophthoras have been selected for preferential expression during the biotrophic phase of disease. Notably, M. roreri isolates in Costa Rica carry a chromosome segment duplication that has doubled the associated gene complement and includes secreted proteins and candidate effectors. Clonal propagation of the haploid M. roreri genome has allowed lineages with unique genome structures and compositions to dominate as it expands its range, displaying a significant founder effect.
Project description:We performed whole genome sequencing on four isolates of C. jejuni, two of which were closely related phylogenetically while the remaining two were phylogenetically divergent. Genomes were closed and finished. 4-plex iTRAQ experiments were performed on the four isolates after growth on solid medium for a standard time. The research questions were: 1) how closely do the protein profiles match among the four isolates, and 2) were there any results consistent with differences in regulation among isolates.
Project description:Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus clonal complex (CC) 398 has emerged from pigs to cause human infections in Europe and North America. We used a new 62-strain S. aureus microarray (SAM-62) to compare genomes of isolates from three geographical areas (Belgium, Denmark, and Netherlands) to understand how CC398 colonizes different mammalian hosts. The core genomes of 44 pig isolates and 32 isolates from humans did not vary. However, mobile genetic element (MGE) distribution was variable including SCCmec. Phi3 bacteriophage and human specificity genes (chp, sak, scn) were found in invasive human but not pig isolates. SaPI5 and putative ruminant specificity gene variants (vwb and scn) were common but not pig specific. Virulence and resistance gene carriage was host associated but country specific. We conclude MGE exchange is frequent in CC398 and greatest among populations in close contact. This feature may help determine epidemiological associations among isolates of the same lineage. [Data is also available from http://bugs.sgul.ac.uk/E-BUGS-120]
2012-01-21 | E-BUGS-120 | biostudies-arrayexpress
Project description:Five New Genomes of Indian Photorhabdus Isolates
Project description:Here we fully characterize the genomes of 14 Plasmodium falciparum patient isolates taken recently from the Iquitos regions using genome-scanning, a microarray-based technique which delineates the majority of single-base changes, indels and copy number variants distinguishing the coding regions of two clones. We show that the parasite population in the Peruvian Amazon is highly structured with a limited number of genotypes and low recombination frequencies. Despite the essentially clonal nature of some isolates, we see high frequencies of mutations in subtelomeric highly variable genes and internal var genes indicating mutations arising during self-mating or mitotic replication. The data also reveal that 1 or 2 meioses separate different isolates showing that P. falciparum clones isolated from different individuals in defined geographical regions could be useful in linkage analyses or quantitative trait locus studies. Through pair-wise comparisons of different isolates we discovered point mutations in the apicoplast genome that are close to known mutations that confer clindamycin resistance in other species but which were hitherto unknown in malaria parasites. Subsequent drug sensitivity testing revealed over 100-fold increase clindamycin EC50 in strains harboring one of these mutations. This evidence of clindamycin resistant parasites in the Amazon suggests a shift should be made in health policy away from quinine+clindamycin therapy for malaria in pregnant women and infants and that the development of new lincosamide antibiotics for malaria should be reconsidered.