Endophytes of the genus Epichloë (Clavicipitaceae, Ascomycota) frequently occur within coolseason grasses and form interactions with their hosts that range from mutualistic to antagonistic. Many Epichloë species have arisen via interspecific hybridization, resulting in species with two or three subgenomes that retain all or nearly all of their original parental genomes, a process termed allopolyploidization. Here, we characterize Epichloë hybrida, sp. nov., a mutualistic species that has increasingly become a model system for investigating allopolyploidy in fungi. The Epichloë species so far identified as the closest known relatives of the two progenitors of E. hybrida are E. festucae var. lolii and E. typhina. We confirm that the nuclear genome of E. hybrida contains two homeologs of most protein-coding genes from E. festucae and E. typhina, with genome-wide gene expression analysis indicating a slight bias in overall gene expression from the E. typhina subgenome. Mitochondrial DNA is detectable only from E. festucae, whereas ribosomal DNA is detectable only from E. typhina. Inheriting ribosomal DNA from just one parent might be expected to preferentially favor interactions with ribosomal proteins from the same parent, but we find that ribosomal protein genes from both parental subgenomes are nearly all expressed equally in E. hybrida. Finally, we provide a comprehensive set of resources for this model system that are intended to facilitate further study of fungal hybridization by other researchers.
ARTICLE HISTORY
Summary
Studies on the regulation of fungal secondary metabolism highlight the importance of histone H3K4 methylation regulators Set1, CclA (Ash2) and KdmB (KDM5), but it remains unclear whether these proteins act by direct modulation of H3K4me3 at the target genes. In filamentous fungi, secondary metabolite genes are frequently located near telomeres, a site where H3K4 methylation is thought to have a repressive role. Here we analyzed the role of CclA, KdmB and H3K4me3 in regulating the subtelomeric EAS and LTM cluster genes in Epichloë festucae. Depletion of H3K4me3 correlated with transcriptional activation of these genes in ΔcclA, similarly enrichment of H3K4me3 correlated with transcriptional repression of the genes in ΔkdmB which was accompanied by significant reduction in the levels of the agriculturally undesirable lolitrems. These transcriptional changes could only be explained by the alterations in H3K4me3 and not in the subtelomerically‐important marks H3K9me3/K27me3. However, H3K4me3 changes in both mutants were not confined to these regions but occurred genome‐wide, and at other subtelomeric loci there were inconsistent correlations between H3K4me3 enrichment and gene repression. Our study suggests that CclA and KdmB are crucial regulators of secondary metabolite genes, but these proteins likely act via means independent to, or in conjunction with the H3K4me3 mark.
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