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  3. An inversion polymorphism under balancing selection, involving giant mobile elements, in an invasive fungal pathogen.
 

An inversion polymorphism under balancing selection, involving giant mobile elements, in an invasive fungal pathogen.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/85831
Publisher DOI
10.1093/molbev/msaf026
PubMed ID
39907064
Description
Recombination suppression can evolve in sex or mating-type chromosomes, or in autosomal supergenes, with different haplotypes being maintained by balancing selection. In the invasive chestnut blight fungus Cryphonectria parasitica, a genomic region was suggested to lack recombination and to be partially physically linked to the mating-type (MAT) locus based on segregation analyses. Using hundreds of available C. parasitica genomes and generating new high-quality genome assemblies, we show that a ca. 1.2 Mb genomic region proximal to the mating-type locus lacks recombination, with the segregation of two highly differentiated haplotypes in balanced proportions in invasive populations. High-quality genome assemblies further revealed an inversion in one of the haplotypes in the invaded range. The two haplotypes were estimated to have diverged 1.5 million years ago, and each harboured specific genes, some of which likely belonging to Starships. These are large trasnposable elements, mobilized by tyrosine recombinases, able to move accessory genes, and involved in adaptation in multiple fungi. The MAT-proximal region carried genes upregulated under virus infection or vegetative incompatibility reaction. In the native range, the MAT-proximal region also appeared to have a different evolutionary history than the rest of the genome. In all continents, the MAT-Proximal region was enriched in non-synonymous substitutions, in gene presence/absence polymorphism, in tyrosine recombinases and in transposable elements. This study thus sheds light on a case of a large non-recombining region partially linked to a mating compatibility locus, likely maintained by balancing selection on differentiated haplotypes, possibly involved in adaptation in a devastating tree pathogen.
Date of Publication
2025-02
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
Starships
•
deleterious allele sheltering
•
evolutionary strata
•
fungi
•
inversion
•
mating-type chromosome
•
recombination suppression
•
sex chromosomes
•
supergenes
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Hartmann, Fanny E
Rodríguez de la Vega, Ricardo C
Demené, Arthur
Badet, Thomas
Vernadet, Jean-Philippe
Rougemont, Quentin
Labat, Amandine
Snirc, Alodie
Stauber, Lea
Institute for Infectious Diseases, Clinical Microbiology
Croll, Daniel
Prospero, Simone
Dutech, Cyril
Giraud, Tatiana
Additional Credits
Institute for Infectious Diseases, Clinical Microbiology
Series
Molecular Biology and Evolution
Publisher
Oxford University Press
ISSN
1537-1719
0737-4038
Access(Rights)
open.access
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