Cellular Dynamics and Genomic Identity of Centromeres in Cereal Blast Fungus

Yadav, Vikas ; Yang, Fan ; Reza, Md. Hashim ; Liu, Sanzhen ; Valent, Barbara ; Sanyal, Kaustuv ; Naqvi, Naweed I. ; Idnurm, Alexander (2019) Cellular Dynamics and Genomic Identity of Centromeres in Cereal Blast Fungus mBio, 10 (4). ISSN 2161-2129

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01581-19

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01581-19

Abstract

Precise kinetochore-microtubule interactions ensure faithful chromosome segregation in eukaryotes. Centromeres, identified as scaffolding sites for kinetochore assembly, are among the most rapidly evolving chromosomal loci in terms of the DNA sequence and length and organization of intrinsic elements. Neither the centromere structure nor the kinetochore dynamics is well studied in plant-pathogenic fungi. Here, we sought to understand the process of chromosome segregation in the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae. High-resolution imaging of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged inner kinetochore proteins CenpA and CenpC revealed unusual albeit transient declustering of centromeres just before anaphase separation of chromosomes in M. oryzae. Strikingly, the declustered centromeres positioned randomly at the spindle midzone without an apparent metaphase plate per se. Using CenpA chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by deep sequencing, all seven centromeres in M. oryzae were found to be regional, spanning 57-kb to 109-kb transcriptionally poor regions. Highly AT-rich and heavily methylated DNA sequences were the only common defining features of all the centromeres in rice blast. Lack of centromere-specific DNA sequence motifs or repetitive elements suggests an epigenetic specification of centromere function in M. oryzae. PacBio genome assemblies and synteny analyses facilitated comparison of the centromeric/pericentromeric regions in distinct isolates of rice blast and wheat blast and in Magnaporthiopsis poae. Overall, this study revealed unusual centromere dynamics and precisely identified the centromere loci in the top model fungal pathogens that belong to Magnaporthales and cause severe losses in the global production of food crops and turf grasses.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Society for Microbiology.
ID Code:124277
Deposited On:10 Nov 2021 12:11
Last Modified:10 Nov 2021 12:11

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