Nature Communications (Sep 2016)

Ectomycorrhizal ecology is imprinted in the genome of the dominant symbiotic fungus Cenococcum geophilum

  • Martina Peter,
  • Annegret Kohler,
  • Robin A. Ohm,
  • Alan Kuo,
  • Jennifer Krützmann,
  • Emmanuelle Morin,
  • Matthias Arend,
  • Kerrie W. Barry,
  • Manfred Binder,
  • Cindy Choi,
  • Alicia Clum,
  • Alex Copeland,
  • Nadine Grisel,
  • Sajeet Haridas,
  • Tabea Kipfer,
  • Kurt LaButti,
  • Erika Lindquist,
  • Anna Lipzen,
  • Renaud Maire,
  • Barbara Meier,
  • Sirma Mihaltcheva,
  • Virginie Molinier,
  • Claude Murat,
  • Stefanie Pöggeler,
  • C. Alisha Quandt,
  • Christoph Sperisen,
  • Andrew Tritt,
  • Emilie Tisserant,
  • Pedro W. Crous,
  • Bernard Henrissat,
  • Uwe Nehls,
  • Simon Egli,
  • Joseph W. Spatafora,
  • Igor V. Grigoriev,
  • Francis M. Martin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12662
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

Read online

The ascomycete Cenococcum geophilum is a beneficial mycorrhizal symbiont found frequently on tree roots. Here the authors use comparative genomics and transcriptomics to define genomic signatures that differentiate the beneficial C. geophilumfrom its saprotrophic and pathogenic relatives.