Article

Metagenomics Shines Light on the Evolution of “Sunscreen” Pigment Metabolism in theTeloschistales(Lichen-Forming Ascomycota)

Details

Citation

Llewellyn T, Nowell RW, Aptroot A, Temina M, Prescott TAK, Barraclough TG & Gaya E (2023) Metagenomics Shines Light on the Evolution of “Sunscreen” Pigment Metabolism in theTeloschistales(Lichen-Forming Ascomycota). Genome Biology and Evolution, 15 (2). https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evad002

Abstract
Fungi produce a vast number of secondary metabolites that shape their interactions with other organisms and the environment. Characterizing the genes underpinning metabolite synthesis is therefore key to understanding fungal evolution and adaptation. Lichenized fungi represent almost one-third of Ascomycota diversity and boast impressive secondary metabolites repertoires. However, most lichen biosynthetic genes have not been linked to their metabolite products. Here we used metagenomic sequencing to survey gene families associated with production of anthraquinones, UV-protectant secondary metabolites present in various fungi, but especially abundant in a diverse order of lichens, the Teloschistales (class Lecanoromycetes, phylum Ascomycota). We successfully assembled 24 new, high-quality lichenized-fungal genomes de novo and combined them with publicly available Lecanoromycetes genomes from taxa with diverse secondary chemistry to produce a whole-genome tree. Secondary metabolite biosynthetic gene cluster (BGC) analysis showed that whilst lichen BGCs are numerous and highly dissimilar, core enzyme genes are generally conserved across taxa. This suggests metabolite diversification occurs via re-shuffling existing enzyme genes with novel accessory genes rather than BGC gains/losses or de novo gene evolution. We identified putative anthraquinone BGCs in our lichen dataset that appear homologous to anthraquinone clusters from non-lichenized fungi, suggesting these genes were present in the common ancestor of the subphylum Pezizomycotina. Finally, we identified unique transporter genes in Teloschistales anthraquinone BGCs that may explain why these metabolites are so abundant and ubiquitous in these lichens. Our results support the importance of metagenomics for understanding the secondary metabolism of non-model fungi such as lichens.

Keywords
Genetics; Ecology; Evolution; Behavior and Systematics

Journal
Genome Biology and Evolution: Volume 15, Issue 2

StatusPublished
FundersNatural Environment Research Council
Publication date28/02/2023
Publication date online31/01/2023
Date accepted by journal09/01/2023
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35980
PublisherOxford University Press (OUP)
eISSN1759-6653

People (1)

People

Dr Reuben Nowell

Dr Reuben Nowell

Lecturer in Animal Evolutionary Biology, Biological and Environmental Sciences