Mining for a new class of fungal natural products: the evolution, diversity, and distribution of isocyanide synthase biosynthetic gene clusters

Author:

Nickles Grant R1ORCID,Oestereicher Brandon2ORCID,Keller Nancy P13ORCID,Drott Milton T4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Wisconsin—Madison , Madison , WI  53706, USA

2. Madison , WI 53703 , USA

3. Department of Plant Pathology, University of Wisconsin—Madison , Madison , WI  53706, USA

4. USDA-ARS Cereal Disease Lab (CDL) , St. Paul , MN  55108, USA

Abstract

Abstract The products of non-canonical isocyanide synthase (ICS) biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) mediate pathogenesis, microbial competition, and metal-homeostasis through metal-associated chemistry. We sought to enable research into this class of compounds by characterizing the biosynthetic potential and evolutionary history of these BGCs across the Fungal Kingdom. We amalgamated a pipeline of tools to predict BGCs based on shared promoter motifs and located 3800 ICS BGCs in 3300 genomes, making ICS BGCs the fifth largest class of specialized metabolites compared to canonical classes found by antiSMASH. ICS BGCs are not evenly distributed across fungi, with evidence of gene-family expansions in several Ascomycete families. We show that the ICS dit1/2 gene cluster family (GCF), which was prior only studied in yeast, is present in ∼30% of all Ascomycetes. The dit variety ICS exhibits greater similarity to bacterial ICS than other fungal ICS, suggesting a potential convergence of the ICS backbone domain. The evolutionary origins of the dit GCF in Ascomycota are ancient and these genes are diversifying in some lineages. Our results create a roadmap for future research into ICS BGCs. We developed a website (https://isocyanides.fungi.wisc.edu/) that facilitates the exploration and downloading of all identified fungal ICS BGCs and GCFs.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

United States Department of Agriculture

Agricultural Research Service

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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