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Home › Publications › The obligate alkalophilic soda-lake fungus Sodiomyces alkalinus has shifted to a protein diet

The obligate alkalophilic soda-lake fungus Sodiomyces alkalinus has shifted to a protein diet

Published in:

Mol Ecol (Dec 1 2018)

Author(s):

Grum-Grzhimaylo, A. A., Falkoski, D. L., van den Heuvel, J., Valero-Jimenez, C. A., Min, B., Choi, I. G., Lipzen, A., Daum, C. G., Aanen, D. K., Tsang, A., Henrissat, B., Bilanenko, E. N., de Vries, R. P., van Kan, J. A. L., Grigoriev, I. V., Debets, A. J. M.

DOI:

10.1111/mec.14912

Abstract:

Sodiomyces alkalinus is one of the very few alkalophilic fungi, adapted to grow optimally at high pH. It is widely distributed at the plant-deprived edges of extremely alkaline lakes and locally abundant. We sequenced the genome of S. alkalinus and reconstructed evolution of catabolic enzymes, using a phylogenomic comparison. We found that the genome of S. alkalinus is larger, but its predicted proteome is smaller and heavily depleted of both plant-degrading enzymes and proteinases, when compared to its closest plant-pathogenic relatives. Interestingly, despite overall losses, S. alkalinus has retained many proteinases families and acquired bacterial-cell-wall-degrading enzymes, some of them via horizontal gene transfer from bacteria. This fungus has very potent proteolytic activity at high pH values, but slowly-induced low activity of cellulases and hemicellulases. Our experimental and in silico data suggest that plant biomass, a common food source for most fungi, is not a preferred substrate for S. alkalinus in its natural environment. We conclude the fungus has abandoned the ancestral plant-based diet, and has become specialized in a more protein-rich food, abundantly available in soda lakes in the form of prokaryotes and crustaceans. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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