Shared transcriptional control and disparate gain and loss of aphid parasitism genes
Authors
Thorpe, Peter
Carmen, Escudero-Martinez
Peter, Cock
Eves-van-den-Akker, S
Jorunn, Boss
Publication Date
2018-10-01Journal Title
Genome Biology and Evolution
ISSN
1759-6653
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Volume
10
Issue
10
Pages
2716-2733
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Thorpe, P., Carmen, E., Peter, C., Eves-van-den-Akker, S., & Jorunn, B. (2018). Shared transcriptional control and disparate gain and loss of aphid parasitism genes. Genome Biology and Evolution, 10 (10), 2716-2733. https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evy183
Abstract
Aphids are a diverse group of taxa that contain agronomically important species, which vary in their host range and ability to infest crop plants. The genome evolution underlying agriculturally important aphid traits is not well understood. We generated draft genome assemblies for two aphid species: Myzus cerasi (black cherry aphid), and the cereal specialist Rhopalosiphum padi. Using a de novo gene prediction pipeline on both these, and three additional aphid genome assemblies (Acyrthosiphon pisum, D. noxia and M. persicae), we show that aphid genomes consistently encode similar gene numbers. We compare gene content, gene duplication, synteny, and putative effector repertoires between these five species to understand the genome evolution of globally important plant parasites. Aphid genomes show signs of relatively distant gene duplication, and substantial, relatively recent, gene birth. Putative effector repertoires, originating from duplicated and other loci have an unusual genomic organisation and evolutionary history. We identify a highly conserved effector-pair that is tightly physically-linked in the genomes of all aphid species tested. In R. padi, this effector pair is tightly transcriptionally-linked, and shares an unknown transcriptional control mechanism with a subset of approximately 50 other putative effectors and secretory proteins. This study extends our current knowledge on the evolution of aphid genomes and reveals evidence for an as of yet unknown shared control mechanism, which underlies effector expression, and ultimately plant parasitism.
Keywords
aphids, effectors, genome evolution, shared transcriptional control, horizontal gene transfer
Sponsorship
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/R011311/1)
Embargo Lift Date
2100-01-01
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evy183
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/284083
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Licence URL: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
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