Abstract:
The pine pitch canker pathogen, Fusarium circinatum, is globally regarded as one of the
most important threats to commercial pine-based forestry. Although genome sequences of this
fungus are available, these remain highly fragmented or structurally ill-defined. Our overall goal
was to provide high-quality assemblies for two notable strains of F. circinatum, and to characterize
these in terms of coding content, repetitiveness and the position of telomeres and centromeres. For
this purpose, we used Oxford Nanopore Technologies MinION long-read sequences, as well as
Illumina short sequence reads. By leveraging the genomic synteny inherent to F. circinatum and
its close relatives, these sequence reads were assembled to chromosome level, where contiguous
sequences mostly spanned from telomere to telomere. Comparative analyses unveiled remarkable
variability in the twelfth and smallest chromosome, which is known to be dispensable. It presented a
striking length polymorphism, with one strain lacking substantial portions from the chromosome’s
distal and proximal regions. These regions, characterized by a lower gene density, G+C content
and an increased prevalence of repetitive elements, contrast starkly with the syntenic segments of
the chromosome, as well as with the core chromosomes. We propose that these unusual regions
might have arisen or expanded due to the presence of transposable elements. A comparison of the
overall chromosome structure revealed that centromeric elements often underpin intrachromosomal
differences between F. circinatum strains, especially at chromosomal breakpoints. This suggests
a potential role for centromeres in shaping the chromosomal architecture of F. circinatum and its
relatives. The publicly available genome data generated here, together with the detailed metadata
provided, represent essential resources for future studies of this important plant pathogen.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT: The Whole Genome Shotgun project for Fusarium circinatum has
been deposited at DDBJ/ENA/GenBank under the accession AYJV00000000 and LQBB00000000 for
F. circinatum FSP34 and KS17, respectively