Comparative genomics of the major agents of human and animal Sporotrichosis: Sporothrix schenckii and Sporothrix brasiliensis

Open Access
Authors
  • M.M. Teixeira
  • L.G.P. de Almeida
  • P. Kubitschek-Barreira
  • F.L. Alves
  • E.S. Kioshima
  • A.K.R. Abadio
  • L. Fernandes
  • L.S. Derengowski
  • K.S. Ferreira
  • R.C. Souza
  • J.C. Ruiz
  • N.C. de Andrade
  • H.C. Paes
  • A.M. Nicola
  • P. Albuquerque
  • A.L. Gerber
  • V.P. Martins
  • L.D.F. Peconick
  • A.V. Neto
  • C.B. Chaucanez
  • P.A. Silva
  • O.L. cunha
  • F.F.M. de Oliveira
  • T.C. dos Santos
  • A.L.N. Barros
  • M.A. Soares
  • L.M. de Oliveira
  • M.M. Marini
  • H. Villalobos-Duno
  • M.M.L. Cunha
  • S. de Hoog
  • J.F. da Silveira
  • B. Henrissat
  • G.A. Niño-Vega
  • P.S. Cisalpino
  • H.M. Mora-Montes
  • S.R. Almeida
  • J.E. Stajich
  • L.M. Lopes-Bezerra
  • A.T.R. Vasconcelos
  • M.S.S. Felipe
Publication date 2014
Journal BMC Genomics
Volume | Issue number 15
Pages (from-to) 943
Number of pages 22
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract
Background: The fungal genus Sporothrix includes at least four human pathogenic species. One of these species, S. brasiliensis, is the causal agent of a major ongoing zoonotic outbreak of sporotrichosis in Brazil. Elsewhere, sapronoses are caused by S. schenckii and S. globosa. The major aims on this comparative genomic study are: 1) to explore the presence of virulence factors in S. schenckii and S. brasiliensis; 2) to compare S. brasiliensis, which is cat-transmitted and infects both humans and cats with S. schenckii, mainly a human pathogen; 3) to compare these two species to other human pathogens (Onygenales) with similar thermo-dimorphic behavior and to other plant-associated Sordariomycetes.

Results: The genomes of S. schenckii and S. brasiliensis were pyrosequenced to 17x and 20x coverage comprising a total of 32.3 Mb and 33.2 Mb, respectively. Pair-wise genome alignments revealed that the two species are highly syntenic showing 97.5% average sequence identity. Phylogenomic analysis reveals that both species diverged about 3.8-4.9 MYA suggesting a recent event of speciation. Transposable elements comprise respectively 0.34% and 0.62% of the S. schenckii and S. brasiliensis genomes and expansions of Gypsy-like elements was observed reflecting the accumulation of repetitive elements in the S. brasiliensis genome. Mitochondrial genomic comparisons showed the presence of group-I intron encoding homing endonucleases (HE’s) exclusively in S. brasiliensis. Analysis of protein family expansions and contractions in the Sporothrix lineage revealed expansion of LysM domain-containing proteins, small GTPases, PKS type1 and leucin-rich proteins. In contrast, a lack of polysaccharide lyase genes that are associated with decay of plants was observed when compared to other Sordariomycetes and dimorphic fungal pathogens, suggesting evolutionary adaptations from a plant pathogenic or saprobic to an animal pathogenic life style.

Conclusions: Comparative genomic data suggest a unique ecological shift in the Sporothrix lineage from plant-association to mammalian parasitism, which contributes to the understanding of how environmental interactions may shape fungal virulence. . Moreover, the striking differences found in comparison with other dimorphic fungi revealed that dimorphism in these close relatives of plant-associated Sordariomycetes is a case of convergent evolution, stressing the importance of this morphogenetic change in fungal pathogenesis.
Document type Article
Note With additional files
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-15-943
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Comparative genomics of the major agents (Final published version)
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