Journal of Fungi (Feb 2024)

Genome Analysis of a Newly Discovered Yeast Species, <i>Hanseniaspora menglaensis</i>

  • Adam P. Ryan,
  • Marizeth Groenewald,
  • Maudy Th. Smith,
  • Cian Holohan,
  • Teun Boekhout,
  • Kenneth H. Wolfe,
  • Geraldine Butler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jof10030180
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
p. 180

Abstract

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Annual surveys of Irish soil samples identified three isolates, CBS 16921 (UCD88), CBS 18246 (UCD443), and CBS 18247 (UCD483), of an apiculate yeast species within the Hanseniaspora genus. The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and D1/D2 region of the large subunit (LSU) rRNA sequences showed that these are isolates of the recently described species Hanseniaspora menglaensis, first isolated from Southwest China. No genome sequence for H. menglaensis is currently available. The genome sequences of the three Irish isolates were determined using short-read (Illumina) sequencing, and the sequence of one isolate (CBS 16921) was assembled to chromosome level using long-read sequencing (Oxford Nanopore Technologies). Phylogenomic analysis shows that H. menglaensis belongs to the fast-evolving lineage (FEL) of Hanseniaspora. Only one MAT idiomorph (encoding MATα1) was identified in all three sequenced H. menglaensis isolates, consistent with one mating type of a heterothallic species. Genome comparisons showed that there has been a rearrangement near MATα of FEL species compared to isolates from the slowly evolving lineage (SEL).

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