“…MFS transporter genes induced during interactions with B. cinerea and F. graminearum almost exclusively belonged to these expanded MFS families, indicating that efflux-mediated protection against exogenous or endogenous secondary metabolites and nutrient uptake are important components of the mycoparasitic attack in C. rosea. MFS transporters were reported to be induced in several other mycoparasitic species, including the closely related C. chloroleuca (Moreira, Abreu, Carvalho, Schroers, & Pfenning, 2016;Sun, Sun, & Li, 2015), Trichoderma spp. (Atanasova, Le Crom et al, 2013;Seidl et al, 2009;Steindorff et al, 2014), Tolypocladium ophioglossoides (Quandt, Di, Elser, Jaiswal, & Spatafora, 2016), Escovopsis weberi (de Man et al, 2016), Pythium oligandrum (Horner, Grenville-Briggs, & Van West, 2012) and Ampelomyces quisqualis (Siozios et al, 2015), but without proper identification of family classification it is difficult to speculate about their exact biological role in these species.…”