home > bioproject > PRJNA194554
identifier PRJNA194554
type bioproject
sameAs
GEO  GSE45406
organism Neurospora crassa
title Genome Wide Association identifies Novel Loci Involved Fungal Communication
description Understanding how genomes encode complex cellular and organismal behaviors is an outstanding challenge of modern genetics. Unlike classical screening methods, analysis of the genetic variation that occurs naturally in wild populations can enable rapid, genome-scale trait mapping with a medium-throughput experimental design. Here we describe the results of the first genome-wide association analysis (GWAS) of a microbial eukaryote, using wild isolates of the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa. We transcriptionally profiled each of 112 individuals collected in Louisiana and used RNA-seq data to genotype each strain at thousands of genetic loci genome-wide. We used these genotypes in a mapping analysis of microbial communication. In N. crassa, germinated asexual spores (germlings) sense the presence of other germlings, grow toward them in a coordinated fashion, and fuse. We evaluated germlings of each strain for their ability to chemically sense, chemotropically seek, and undergo cell fusion. GWAS identified one gene, NCU04379 (cse-1, encoding a homolog of neuronal calcium sensor), at which inheritance was strongly associated with the efficiency of germling communication. Deletion of cse-1 significantly lowered germling communication and fusion, and two genes encoding predicted binding partners of CSE-1 were also required for the communication trait. Additionally, mining our association results for signaling and secretion genes with a potential role in germling communication, we validated six more novel determinants of germling communication, including a secreted protease and two other genes whose deletion conferred a novel phenotype of increased communication and multi-germling fusion. These results establish protein secretion as a linchpin of germling communication in N. crassa and shed light on the regulation of communication molecules in this fungus. Our study demonstrates the power of population-genetic analyses for the rapid identification of genes contributing to complex traits in microbial species.Overall design: 112 mycelial mRNA profiles of 16 hour wild type (WT) Neurospora crassa strains were generated by deep sequencing, using Illumina GAIIx.
data type Transcriptome or Gene expression
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