Applied Mycology and Biotechnology, Vol. 4, in press. Edited by DK Arora & GG Khachatourians.
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Genomics in Neurospora crassa: From One-Gene-One-Enzyme to 10,000 Genes
Edward L. Braun,
Donald O. Natvig,
Margaret Werner-Washburne and
Mary Anne Nelson*
Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611 (E.L.B.) and
Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131 (D.O.N., M.W.-W., M.A.N.);
Neurospora crassa was the central organism in the development of
biochemical genetics, providing a model system that established
the relationship between genes and enzymes; it remains the best-studied
filamentous fungus. This review focuses on the impact that the recent
publication of a high-quality draft sequence of the N. crassa genome
will have upon efforts to understand the biology of the filamentous
fungi. Although several fungal genomes have been sequenced,
annotated, and published, the organisms that have been examined
are yeasts with relatively small genomes. In sharp contrast,
N. crassa contains about 10,000 protein-coding genes, approximately
twice as many genes as the yeasts and only slightly fewer than the
invertebrate animals. Analysis of this gene set suggests that
several different processes have led to the differences in gene
content between N. crassa and the yeasts. Evidence for the loss
of genes in the yeasts and the acquisition of novel genes in
Neurospora lineage is described, as well as details regarding
the biological processes that have led to these changes.
Analyses of the N. crassa genome sequence revealed the widest
array of genome defense mechanisms known for any organism, and
one of these defense mechanisms (RIP) appears to have blocked
the productive duplication of genes. Since gene duplication
is the most common pathway for the origin of novel genes, it
seems likely that N. crassa will provide an excellent model
system for understanding alternative ways in which novel
genes arise. A number of unexpected genes were identified
when the complete genome sequence was analyzed, indicating
that N. crassa produces secondary metabolites, shares apparent
"pathogenicity" genes with plant pathogens, and responds to
environmental cues such as light in novel ways. The genome
sequence for N. crassa is the first exciting step toward a
detailed understanding of the biology of filamentous fungi,
and it will allow fungal biologists to establish which
features of the filamentous fungi are shared with non-fungal
organisms and which features are unique.
This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation (grant no. MCB-9874488 to M.A.N.).
* Corresponding author