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Featured researches published by Robin A. Ohm.


Science | 2012

The Paleozoic Origin of Enzymatic Lignin Decomposition Reconstructed from 31 Fungal Genomes

Dimitrios Floudas; Manfred Binder; Robert Riley; Kerrie Barry; Robert A. Blanchette; Bernard Henrissat; Ángel T. Martínez; Robert Otillar; Joseph W. Spatafora; Jagjit S. Yadav; Andrea Aerts; Isabelle Benoit; Alex Boyd; Alexis Carlson; Alex Copeland; Pedro M. Coutinho; Ronald P. de Vries; Patricia Ferreira; Keisha Findley; Brian Foster; Jill Gaskell; Dylan Glotzer; Paweł Górecki; Joseph Heitman; Cedar Hesse; Chiaki Hori; Kiyohiko Igarashi; Joel A. Jurgens; Nathan Kallen; Phil Kersten

Dating Wood Rot Specific lineages within the basidiomycete fungi, white rot species, have evolved the ability to break up a major structural component of woody plants, lignin, relative to their non–lignin-decaying brown rot relatives. Through the deep phylogenetic sampling of fungal genomes, Floudas et al. (p. 1715; see the Perspective by Hittinger) mapped the detailed evolution of wood-degrading enzymes. A key peroxidase and other enzymes involved in lignin decay were present in the common ancestor of the Agaricomycetes. These genes then expanded through gene duplications in parallel, giving rise to white rot lineages. The enzyme family that enables fungi to digest lignin expanded around the end of the coal-forming Carboniferous period. Wood is a major pool of organic carbon that is highly resistant to decay, owing largely to the presence of lignin. The only organisms capable of substantial lignin decay are white rot fungi in the Agaricomycetes, which also contains non–lignin-degrading brown rot and ectomycorrhizal species. Comparative analyses of 31 fungal genomes (12 generated for this study) suggest that lignin-degrading peroxidases expanded in the lineage leading to the ancestor of the Agaricomycetes, which is reconstructed as a white rot species, and then contracted in parallel lineages leading to brown rot and mycorrhizal species. Molecular clock analyses suggest that the origin of lignin degradation might have coincided with the sharp decrease in the rate of organic carbon burial around the end of the Carboniferous period.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

MycoCosm portal: gearing up for 1000 fungal genomes

Igor V. Grigoriev; Roman Nikitin; Sajeet Haridas; Alan Kuo; Robin A. Ohm; Robert Otillar; Robert Riley; Asaf Salamov; Xueling Zhao; Frank Korzeniewski; Tatyana Smirnova; Henrik Nordberg; Inna Dubchak; Igor Shabalov

MycoCosm is a fungal genomics portal (http://jgi.doe.gov/fungi), developed by the US Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute to support integration, analysis and dissemination of fungal genome sequences and other ‘omics’ data by providing interactive web-based tools. MycoCosm also promotes and facilitates user community participation through the nomination of new species of fungi for sequencing, and the annotation and analysis of resulting data. By efficiently filling gaps in the Fungal Tree of Life, MycoCosm will help address important problems associated with energy and the environment, taking advantage of growing fungal genomics resources.


Nature Biotechnology | 2010

Genome sequence of the model mushroom Schizophyllum commune

Robin A. Ohm; Jan F. de Jong; Luis G. Lugones; Andrea Aerts; Erika Kothe; Jason E. Stajich; Ronald P. de Vries; Eric Record; Anthony Levasseur; Scott E. Baker; Kirk A. Bartholomew; Pedro M. Coutinho; Susann Erdmann; Thomas J. Fowler; Allen C. Gathman; Vincent Lombard; Bernard Henrissat; Nicole Knabe; Ursula Kües; Walt W. Lilly; Erika Lindquist; Susan Lucas; Jon K. Magnuson; François Piumi; Marjatta Raudaskoski; Asaf Salamov; Jeremy Schmutz; Francis W. M. R. Schwarze; Patricia A. vanKuyk; J. Stephen Horton

Much remains to be learned about the biology of mushroom-forming fungi, which are an important source of food, secondary metabolites and industrial enzymes. The wood-degrading fungus Schizophyllum commune is both a genetically tractable model for studying mushroom development and a likely source of enzymes capable of efficient degradation of lignocellulosic biomass. Comparative analyses of its 38.5-megabase genome, which encodes 13,210 predicted genes, reveal the speciess unique wood-degrading machinery. One-third of the 471 genes predicted to encode transcription factors are differentially expressed during sexual development of S. commune. Whereas inactivation of one of these, fst4, prevented mushroom formation, inactivation of another, fst3, resulted in more, albeit smaller, mushrooms than in the wild-type fungus. Antisense transcripts may also have a role in the formation of fruiting bodies. Better insight into the mechanisms underlying mushroom formation should affect commercial production of mushrooms and their industrial use for producing enzymes and pharmaceuticals.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

Diverse Lifestyles and Strategies of Plant Pathogenesis Encoded in the Genomes of Eighteen Dothideomycetes Fungi

Robin A. Ohm; Nicolas Feau; Bernard Henrissat; Conrad L. Schoch; Benjamin A. Horwitz; Kerrie Barry; Bradford Condon; Alex Copeland; Braham Dhillon; Fabian Glaser; Cedar Hesse; Idit Kosti; Kurt LaButti; Erika Lindquist; Susan Lucas; Asaf Salamov; Rosie E. Bradshaw; Lynda M. Ciuffetti; Richard C. Hamelin; Gert H. J. Kema; Christopher B. Lawrence; James A. Scott; Joseph W. Spatafora; B. Gillian Turgeon; Pierre J. G. M. de Wit; Shaobin Zhong; Stephen B. Goodwin; Igor V. Grigoriev

The class Dothideomycetes is one of the largest groups of fungi with a high level of ecological diversity including many plant pathogens infecting a broad range of hosts. Here, we compare genome features of 18 members of this class, including 6 necrotrophs, 9 (hemi)biotrophs and 3 saprotrophs, to analyze genome structure, evolution, and the diverse strategies of pathogenesis. The Dothideomycetes most likely evolved from a common ancestor more than 280 million years ago. The 18 genome sequences differ dramatically in size due to variation in repetitive content, but show much less variation in number of (core) genes. Gene order appears to have been rearranged mostly within chromosomal boundaries by multiple inversions, in extant genomes frequently demarcated by adjacent simple repeats. Several Dothideomycetes contain one or more gene-poor, transposable element (TE)-rich putatively dispensable chromosomes of unknown function. The 18 Dothideomycetes offer an extensive catalogue of genes involved in cellulose degradation, proteolysis, secondary metabolism, and cysteine-rich small secreted proteins. Ancestors of the two major orders of plant pathogens in the Dothideomycetes, the Capnodiales and Pleosporales, may have had different modes of pathogenesis, with the former having fewer of these genes than the latter. Many of these genes are enriched in proximity to transposable elements, suggesting faster evolution because of the effects of repeat induced point (RIP) mutations. A syntenic block of genes, including oxidoreductases, is conserved in most Dothideomycetes and upregulated during infection in L. maculans, suggesting a possible function in response to oxidative stress.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Genome sequence of the button mushroom Agaricus bisporus reveals mechanisms governing adaptation to a humic-rich ecological niche

Emmanuelle Morin; Annegret Kohler; Adam R. Baker; Marie Foulongne-Oriol; Vincent Lombard; László G. Nagy; Robin A. Ohm; Aleksandrina Patyshakuliyeva; Annick Brun; Andrea Aerts; Andy M. Bailey; Christophe Billette; Pedro M. Coutinho; Greg Deakin; Harshavardhan Doddapaneni; Dimitrios Floudas; Jane Grimwood; Kristiina Hildén; Ursula Kües; Kurt LaButti; Alla Lapidus; Erika Lindquist; Susan Lucas; Claude Murat; Robert Riley; Asaf Salamov; Jeremy Schmutz; Venkataramanan Subramanian; Han A. B. Wösten; Jianping Xu

Agaricus bisporus is the model fungus for the adaptation, persistence, and growth in the humic-rich leaf-litter environment. Aside from its ecological role, A. bisporus has been an important component of the human diet for over 200 y and worldwide cultivation of the “button mushroom” forms a multibillion dollar industry. We present two A. bisporus genomes, their gene repertoires and transcript profiles on compost and during mushroom formation. The genomes encode a full repertoire of polysaccharide-degrading enzymes similar to that of wood-decayers. Comparative transcriptomics of mycelium grown on defined medium, casing-soil, and compost revealed genes encoding enzymes involved in xylan, cellulose, pectin, and protein degradation are more highly expressed in compost. The striking expansion of heme-thiolate peroxidases and β-etherases is distinctive from Agaricomycotina wood-decayers and suggests a broad attack on decaying lignin and related metabolites found in humic acid-rich environment. Similarly, up-regulation of these genes together with a lignolytic manganese peroxidase, multiple copper radical oxidases, and cytochrome P450s is consistent with challenges posed by complex humic-rich substrates. The gene repertoire and expression of hydrolytic enzymes in A. bisporus is substantially different from the taxonomically related ectomycorrhizal symbiont Laccaria bicolor. A common promoter motif was also identified in genes very highly expressed in humic-rich substrates. These observations reveal genetic and enzymatic mechanisms governing adaptation to the humic-rich ecological niche formed during plant degradation, further defining the critical role such fungi contribute to soil structure and carbon sequestration in terrestrial ecosystems. Genome sequence will expedite mushroom breeding for improved agronomic characteristics.


PLOS Genetics | 2012

The genomes of the fungal plant pathogens Cladosporium fulvum and Dothistroma septosporum reveal adaptation to different hosts and lifestyles but also signatures of common ancestry.

Pierre J. G. M. de Wit; Ate van der Burgt; B. Ökmen; I. Stergiopoulos; Kamel A. Abd-Elsalam; Andrea Aerts; Ali H. Bahkali; H. Beenen; Pranav Chettri; Murray P. Cox; Erwin Datema; Ronald P. de Vries; Braham Dhillon; Austen R. D. Ganley; S.A. Griffiths; Yanan Guo; Richard C. Hamelin; Bernard Henrissat; M. Shahjahan Kabir; Mansoor Karimi Jashni; Gert H. J. Kema; Sylvia Klaubauf; Alla Lapidus; Anthony Levasseur; Erika Lindquist; Rahim Mehrabi; Robin A. Ohm; Timothy J. Owen; Asaf Salamov; Arne Schwelm

We sequenced and compared the genomes of the Dothideomycete fungal plant pathogens Cladosporium fulvum (Cfu) (syn. Passalora fulva) and Dothistroma septosporum (Dse) that are closely related phylogenetically, but have different lifestyles and hosts. Although both fungi grow extracellularly in close contact with host mesophyll cells, Cfu is a biotroph infecting tomato, while Dse is a hemibiotroph infecting pine. The genomes of these fungi have a similar set of genes (70% of gene content in both genomes are homologs), but differ significantly in size (Cfu >61.1-Mb; Dse 31.2-Mb), which is mainly due to the difference in repeat content (47.2% in Cfu versus 3.2% in Dse). Recent adaptation to different lifestyles and hosts is suggested by diverged sets of genes. Cfu contains an α-tomatinase gene that we predict might be required for detoxification of tomatine, while this gene is absent in Dse. Many genes encoding secreted proteins are unique to each species and the repeat-rich areas in Cfu are enriched for these species-specific genes. In contrast, conserved genes suggest common host ancestry. Homologs of Cfu effector genes, including Ecp2 and Avr4, are present in Dse and induce a Cf-Ecp2- and Cf-4-mediated hypersensitive response, respectively. Strikingly, genes involved in production of the toxin dothistromin, a likely virulence factor for Dse, are conserved in Cfu, but their expression differs markedly with essentially no expression by Cfu in planta. Likewise, Cfu has a carbohydrate-degrading enzyme catalog that is more similar to that of necrotrophs or hemibiotrophs and a larger pectinolytic gene arsenal than Dse, but many of these genes are not expressed in planta or are pseudogenized. Overall, comparison of their genomes suggests that these closely related plant pathogens had a common ancestral host but since adapted to different hosts and lifestyles by a combination of differentiated gene content, pseudogenization, and gene regulation.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

Comparative Genome Structure, Secondary Metabolite, and Effector Coding Capacity across Cochliobolus Pathogens

Bradford Condon; Yueqiang Leng; Dongliang Wu; Kathryn E. Bushley; Robin A. Ohm; Robert Otillar; Joel Martin; Wendy Schackwitz; Jane Grimwood; NurAinIzzati A I MohdZainudin; Chunsheng Xue; Rui Wang; Viola A. Manning; Braham Dhillon; Zheng Jin Tu; Brian J. Steffenson; Asaf Salamov; Hui Sun; Steve Lowry; Kurt LaButti; James Han; Alex Copeland; Erika Lindquist; Kerrie Barry; Jeremy Schmutz; Scott E. Baker; Lynda M. Ciuffetti; Igor V. Grigoriev; Shaobin Zhong; B. Gillian Turgeon

The genomes of five Cochliobolus heterostrophus strains, two Cochliobolus sativus strains, three additional Cochliobolus species (Cochliobolus victoriae, Cochliobolus carbonum, Cochliobolus miyabeanus), and closely related Setosphaeria turcica were sequenced at the Joint Genome Institute (JGI). The datasets were used to identify SNPs between strains and species, unique genomic regions, core secondary metabolism genes, and small secreted protein (SSP) candidate effector encoding genes with a view towards pinpointing structural elements and gene content associated with specificity of these closely related fungi to different cereal hosts. Whole-genome alignment shows that three to five percent of each genome differs between strains of the same species, while a quarter of each genome differs between species. On average, SNP counts among field isolates of the same C. heterostrophus species are more than 25× higher than those between inbred lines and 50× lower than SNPs between Cochliobolus species. The suites of nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS), polyketide synthase (PKS), and SSP–encoding genes are astoundingly diverse among species but remarkably conserved among isolates of the same species, whether inbred or field strains, except for defining examples that map to unique genomic regions. Functional analysis of several strain-unique PKSs and NRPSs reveal a strong correlation with a role in virulence.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Comparative genomics of biotechnologically important yeasts

Robert Riley; Sajeet Haridas; Kenneth H. Wolfe; Mariana R. Lopes; Chris Todd Hittinger; Markus Göker; Asaf Salamov; Jennifer H. Wisecaver; Tanya M. Long; Christopher H. Calvey; Andrea Aerts; Kerrie Barry; Cindy Choi; Alicia Clum; Aisling Y. Coughlan; Shweta Deshpande; Alexander P. Douglass; Sara J. Hanson; Hans-Peter Klenk; Kurt LaButti; Alla Lapidus; Erika Lindquist; Anna Lipzen; Jan P. Meier-Kolthoff; Robin A. Ohm; Robert Otillar; Jasmyn Pangilinan; Yi Peng; Antonis Rokas; Carlos A. Rosa

Significance The highly diverse Ascomycete yeasts have enormous biotechnological potential. Collectively, these yeasts convert a broad range of substrates into useful compounds, such as ethanol, lipids, and vitamins, and can grow in extremes of temperature, salinity, and pH. We compared 29 yeast genomes with the goal of correlating genetics to useful traits. In one rare species, we discovered a genetic code that translates CUG codons to alanine rather than canonical leucine. Genome comparison enabled correlation of genes to useful metabolic properties and showed the synteny of the mating-type locus to be conserved over a billion years of evolution. Our study provides a roadmap for future biotechnological exploitations. Ascomycete yeasts are metabolically diverse, with great potential for biotechnology. Here, we report the comparative genome analysis of 29 taxonomically and biotechnologically important yeasts, including 16 newly sequenced. We identify a genetic code change, CUG-Ala, in Pachysolen tannophilus in the clade sister to the known CUG-Ser clade. Our well-resolved yeast phylogeny shows that some traits, such as methylotrophy, are restricted to single clades, whereas others, such as l-rhamnose utilization, have patchy phylogenetic distributions. Gene clusters, with variable organization and distribution, encode many pathways of interest. Genomics can predict some biochemical traits precisely, but the genomic basis of others, such as xylose utilization, remains unresolved. Our data also provide insight into early evolution of ascomycetes. We document the loss of H3K9me2/3 heterochromatin, the origin of ascomycete mating-type switching, and panascomycete synteny at the MAT locus. These data and analyses will facilitate the engineering of efficient biosynthetic and degradative pathways and gateways for genomic manipulation.


Molecular Microbiology | 2011

Transcription factor genes of Schizophyllum commune involved in regulation of mushroom formation.

Robin A. Ohm; Jan F. de Jong; Charissa de Bekker; Han A. B. Wösten; Luis G. Lugones

Mushrooms represent the most conspicuous structures of fungi. Their development is being studied in the model basidiomycete Schizophyllum commune. The genome of S. commune contains 472 genes encoding predicted transcription factors. Of these, fst3 and fst4 were shown to inhibit and induce mushroom development respectively. Here, we inactivated five additional transcription factor genes. This resulted in absence of mushroom development (in the case of deletion of bri1 and hom2), in arrested development at the stage of aggregate formation (in the case of c2h2) and in the formation of more but smaller mushrooms (in the case of hom1 and gat1). Moreover, strains in which hom2 and bri1 were inactivated formed symmetrical colonies instead of irregular colonies like the wild type. A genome‐wide expression analysis identified several gene classes that were differentially expressed in the strains in which either hom2 or fst4 was inactivated. Among the genes that were downregulated in these strains were c2h2 and hom1. Based on these results, a regulatory model of mushroom development in S. commune is proposed. This model most likely also applies to other mushroom‐forming fungi and will serve as a basis to understand mushroom formation in nature and to enable and improve commercial mushroom production.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2015

Evolution of novel wood decay mechanisms in Agaricales revealed by the genome sequences of Fistulina hepatica and Cylindrobasidium torrendii

Dimitrios Floudas; Benjamin W. Held; Robert Riley; László G. Nagy; Gage Koehler; Anthony S. Ransdell; Hina Younus; Julianna Chow; Jennifer Chiniquy; Anna Lipzen; Andrew Tritt; Hui Sun; Sajeet Haridas; Kurt LaButti; Robin A. Ohm; Ursula Kües; Robert A. Blanchette; Igor V. Grigoriev; Robert E. Minto; David S. Hibbett

Wood decay mechanisms in Agaricomycotina have been traditionally separated in two categories termed white and brown rot. Recently the accuracy of such a dichotomy has been questioned. Here, we present the genome sequences of the white-rot fungus Cylindrobasidium torrendii and the brown-rot fungus Fistulina hepatica both members of Agaricales, combining comparative genomics and wood decay experiments. C. torrendii is closely related to the white-rot root pathogen Armillaria mellea, while F. hepatica is related to Schizophyllum commune, which has been reported to cause white rot. Our results suggest that C. torrendii and S. commune are intermediate between white-rot and brown-rot fungi, but at the same time they show characteristics of decay that resembles soft rot. Both species cause weak wood decay and degrade all wood components but leave the middle lamella intact. Their gene content related to lignin degradation is reduced, similar to brown-rot fungi, but both have maintained a rich array of genes related to carbohydrate degradation, similar to white-rot fungi. These characteristics appear to have evolved from white-rot ancestors with stronger ligninolytic ability. F. hepatica shows characteristics of brown rot both in terms of wood decay genes found in its genome and the decay that it causes. However, genes related to cellulose degradation are still present, which is a plesiomorphic characteristic shared with its white-rot ancestors. Four wood degradation-related genes, homologs of which are frequently lost in brown-rot fungi, show signs of pseudogenization in the genome of F. hepatica. These results suggest that transition toward a brown-rot lifestyle could be an ongoing process in F. hepatica. Our results reinforce the idea that wood decay mechanisms are more diverse than initially thought and that the dichotomous separation of wood decay mechanisms in Agaricomycotina into white rot and brown rot should be revisited.

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Igor V. Grigoriev

United States Department of Energy

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Kurt LaButti

United States Department of Energy

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Erika Lindquist

United States Department of Energy

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Anna Lipzen

United States Department of Energy

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Kerrie Barry

United States Department of Energy

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Asaf Salamov

United States Department of Energy

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Robert Riley

United States Department of Energy

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