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Featured researches published by Runmao Lin.


BMC Microbiology | 2015

Analysis of the complete mitochondrial genome of Pochonia chlamydosporia suggests a close relationship to the invertebrate-pathogenic fungi in Hypocreales

Runmao Lin; Chichuan Liu; Baoming Shen; Miao Bai; Jian Ling; Guohua Chen; Zhenchuan Mao; Xinyue Cheng; Bingyan Xie

BackgroundThe fungus Pochonia chlamydosporia parasitizes nematode eggs and has become one of the most promising biological control agents (BCAs) for plant-parasitic nematodes, which are major agricultural pests that cause tremendous economic losses worldwide. The complete mitochondrial (mt) genome is expected to open new avenues for understanding the phylogenetic relationships and evolution of the invertebrate-pathogenic fungi in Hypocreales.ResultsThe complete mitogenome sequence of P. chlamydosporia is 25,615 bp in size, containing the 14 typical protein-coding genes, two ribosomal RNA genes, an intronic ORF coding for a putative ribosomal protein (rps3) and a set of 23 transfer RNA genes (trn) which recognize codons for all amino acids. Sequence similarity studies and syntenic gene analyses show that 87.02% and 58.72% of P. chlamydosporia mitogenome sequences match 90.50% of Metarhizium anisopliae sequences and 61.33% of Lecanicillium muscarium sequences with 92.38% and 86.04% identities, respectively. A phylogenetic tree inferred from 14 mt proteins in Pezizomycotina fungi supports that P. chlamydosporia is most closely related to the entomopathogenic fungus M. anisopliae. The invertebrate-pathogenic fungi in Hypocreales cluster together and clearly separate from a cluster comprising plant-pathogenic fungi (Fusarium spp.) and Hypocrea jecorina. A comparison of mitogenome sizes shows that the length of the intergenic regions or the intronic regions is the major size contributor in most of mitogenomes in Sordariomycetes. Evolutionary analysis shows that rps3 is under positive selection, leading to the display of unique evolutionary characteristics in Hypocreales. Moreover, the variability of trn distribution has a clear impact on gene order in mitogenomes. Gene rearrangement analysis shows that operation of transposition drives the rearrangement events in Pezizomycotina, and most events involve in trn position changes, but no rearrangement was found in Clavicipitaceae.ConclusionsWe present the complete annotated mitogenome sequence of P. chlamydosporia. Based on evolutionary and phylogenetic analyses, we have determined the relationships between the invertebrate-pathogenic fungi in Hypocreales. The invertebrate-pathogenic fungi in Hypocreales referred to in this paper form a monophyletic group sharing a most recent common ancestor. Our rps3 and trn gene order results also establish a foundation for further exploration of the evolutionary trajectory of the fungi in Hypocreales.


PLOS Pathogens | 2016

Biosynthesis of Antibiotic Leucinostatins in Bio-control Fungus Purpureocillium lilacinum and Their Inhibition on Phytophthora Revealed by Genome Mining

Gang Wang; Zhiguo Liu; Runmao Lin; Erfeng Li; Zhenchuan Mao; Jian Ling; Yuhong Yang; Wen-Bing Yin; Bingyan Xie

Purpureocillium lilacinum of Ophiocordycipitaceae is one of the most promising and commercialized agents for controlling plant parasitic nematodes, as well as other insects and plant pathogens. However, how the fungus functions at the molecular level remains unknown. Here, we sequenced two isolates (PLBJ-1 and PLFJ-1) of P. lilacinum from different places Beijing and Fujian. Genomic analysis showed high synteny of the two isolates, and the phylogenetic analysis indicated they were most related to the insect pathogen Tolypocladium inflatum. A comparison with other species revealed that this fungus was enriched in carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes), proteases and pathogenesis related genes. Whole genome search revealed a rich repertoire of secondary metabolites (SMs) encoding genes. The non-ribosomal peptide synthetase LcsA, which is comprised of ten C-A-PCP modules, was identified as the core biosynthetic gene of lipopeptide leucinostatins, which was specific to P. lilacinum and T. ophioglossoides, as confirmed by phylogenetic analysis. Furthermore, gene expression level was analyzed when PLBJ-1 was grown in leucinostatin-inducing and non-inducing medium, and 20 genes involved in the biosynthesis of leucionostatins were identified. Disruption mutants allowed us to propose a putative biosynthetic pathway of leucinostatin A. Moreover, overexpression of the transcription factor lcsF increased the production (1.5-fold) of leucinostatins A and B compared to wild type. Bioassays explored a new bioactivity of leucinostatins and P. lilacinum: inhibiting the growth of Phytophthora infestans and P. capsici. These results contribute to our understanding of the biosynthetic mechanism of leucinostatins and may allow us to utilize P. lilacinum better as bio-control agent.


Microbiological Research | 2015

Development of a high-efficiency gene knockout system for Pochonia chlamydosporia.

Baoming Shen; Jiling Xiao; Liangying Dai; Yonghong Huang; Zhenchuan Mao; Runmao Lin; Yurong Yao; Bingyan Xie

The nematophagous fungus Pochonia chlamydosporia, which belongs to the family Clavicipitaceae (Ascomycota: Pezizomycotina: Sordariomycetes: Hypocreales), is a promising biological control agent for root-knot and cyst nematodes. Its biocontrol effect has been confirmed by pot and field trials. The genome sequence of the fungus was completed recently; therefore, genome-wide functional analyses will identify its infection-associated genes. Gene knockout techniques are useful molecular tools to study gene functions. However, cultures of P. chlamydosporia are resistant to high levels of a range of fungal inhibitors, which makes the gene knockout technique difficult in this fungus. Fortunately, we found that the wild P. chlamydosporia strain PC-170 could not grow on medium containing 150μgml(-1) G418 sulfate, representing a new selectable marker for P. chlamydosporia. The neomycin-resistance gene (neo), which was amplified from the plasmid pKOV21, conferred G418-resistance on the fungus; therefore, it was chosen as the marker gene. We subsequently developed a gene knockout system for P. chlamydosporia using split-marker homologous recombination cassettes with resistance selection and protoplast transformation. The split-marker cassettes were developed using fusion PCR, and involved only two rounds of PCR. The final products comprised two linear constructs. Each construct contained a flanking region of the target gene and two thirds of the neo gene. Alkaline serine protease and chitinase were confirmed to be produced by P. chlamydosporia during infection of nematode eggs and could participate in lysis of the eggshell of nematode eggs. Here, we knocked out one chitinase gene, VFPPC_01099, and two protease genes (VFPPC_10088, VFPPC_06535). We obtained approximately 100 suspected mutants after each transformation. After screening by PCR, the average rate of gene knockout was 13%: 11% (VFPPC_01099), 13% (VFPPC_10088) and 15% (VFPPC_06535). This efficient and convenient technique will accelerate functional genomic studies in P. chlamydosporia.


Mitochondrial DNA | 2015

The complete mitochondrial genome of the nematophagous fungus Acremonium implicatum

Yurong Yao; Runmao Lin; Xueliang Tian; Baoming Shen; Zhenchuan Mao; Bingyan Xie

Abstract The complete mitochondrial genome of the nematophagous fungus Acremonium implicatum is reported for the first time. The genome is concatenated with 22,367 bp in length, encoding 13 protein-coding genes, 2 ribosomal RNA genes and a set of 17 transfer RNA genes. The synteny analysis reveals that 50.35% of A. implicatum mitochondrial sequences matched to 48.21% of Acremonium chrysogenum mitochondrial sequences with 85.68% identity. Two proteins of cox3 and nad6, as well as seven tRNAs are lost in A. implicatum mitogenome compared to A. chrysogenum mitogenome. The gene orders in A. implicatum and A. chrysogenum mitogenome is different, which is mainly due to the location of nad4 and cox2. In addition, one transposition event related to tRNAs is identified in these two mitogenomes. This study may provide valuable mitochondrial information for research on A. implicatum and facilitate the study of mitochondrial evolution.


Mitochondrial DNA | 2017

The complete mitochondrial genome of the nematophagous fungus Lecanicillium saksenae

Bei Xin; Runmao Lin; Baoming Shen; Zhenchuan Mao; Xinyue Cheng; Bingyan Xie

Abstract Lecanicillium saksenae CGMCC5329 is a useful biological control agent against plant-parasitic nematodes. The complete mitogenome sequence of L. saksenae is reported for the first time. The mitochondrial genome is 25 919 bp long with 14 typical protein-coding genes, an intronic ORF coding for a putative ribosomal protein (rps3), 2 ribosomal RNA genes and a set of 26 transfer RNA genes. The phylogeny based on 12 protein-coding genes (except the loss of other two genes in Acremonium implicatum) suggests the close phylogenetic relationship between L. saksenae and L. muscarium. Comparative analysis reveals that mitogenome of L. saksenae is 1420 bp larger than L. muscarium, mainly due to the intergenic region between cox2 and trnR. The trnC between cob and cox1 is conserved in the mitogenomes of three nematophagous fungus of Pochonia chlamydosporia, A. implicatum and L. saksenae, but absent in L. muscarium. This study may provide valuable information for further research on mitochondrial evolution of nematophagous fungus and Lecanicillium species.


Archive | 2017

Comparative Analysis of Pochonia chlamydosporia Mitogenome Reveals Dynamic Mitochondrial Evolution of the Nematophagous Fungi in Hypocreales

Runmao Lin; Xinyue Cheng; Bingyan Xie

Mitochondria, the independent organelles, play diverse and crucial roles in eukaryotic cells. Their genetic materials can be used to provide hints concerning the evolutionary history of life. To understand the evolution of the nematophagous fungus Pochonia chlamydosporia, we analysed the organization of its mitogenome that encodes 14 typical protein-coding genes, two ribosomal RNAs, an intronic ribosomal protein (rps3) and a set of 23 transfer RNAs. Comparative analysis of mitogenomes between P. chlamydosporia and other four nematophagous fungi (Lecanicillium saksenae, Acremonium implicatum (= Sarocladium implicatum), Hirsutella minnesotensis and Hirsutella rhossiliensis) shows that they commonly encode 13 typical protein-coding genes and 12 types of tRNA and they naturally exhibit differences in gene numbers, introns and intergenic regions. The variable sizes of these five mitogenomes are mainly contributed by intergenic regions and coding regions. To identify any conflicts in phylogenetic relationships present in the invertebrate-pathogenic fungi and the plant pathogens between nuclear and mitochondrial phylogenies in Hypocreales, we performed a phylogenetic analysis based on the detected best model for amino acid sequences of 14 typical genes by manually improving the alignments. We found that the mitochondrial phylogeny is similar to the nuclear phylogeny, suggesting the same roles for both trees to investigate the phylogenetic relationships of species in Hypocreales. Moreover, the positively selected rps3 genes with their special phylogenetic relationships that are different from those inferred from the other 14 protein-coding genes may contribute to explore further the evolutionary trajectory of the fungi in the Hypocreales.


Scientific Reports | 2018

A Meloidogyne incognita effector MiISE5 suppresses programmed cell death to promote parasitism in host plant

Qianqian Shi; Zhenchuan Mao; Xi Zhang; Xiaoping Zhang; Yunsheng Wang; Jian Ling; Runmao Lin; Denghui Li; Xincong Kang; Wenxian Sun; Bingyan Xie

Root-knot nematodes (RKNs) are highly specialized parasites that interact with their host plants using a range of strategies. The esophageal glands are the main places where nematodes synthesize effector proteins, which play central roles in successful invasion. The Meloidogyne incognita effector MiISE5 is exclusively expressed within the subventral esophageal cells and is upregulated during early parasitic stages. In this study, we show that MiISE5 can be secreted to barley cells through infectious hyphae of Magnaporthe oryzae. Transgenic Arabidopsis plants expressing MiISE5 became significantly more susceptible to M. incognita. Inversely, the tobacco rattle virus (TRV)-mediated silence of MiISE5 decreased nematode parasitism. Moreover, transient expression of MiISE5 suppressed cell death caused by Burkholderia glumae in Nicotiana benthamiana. Based on transcriptome analysis of MiISE5 transgenic sample and the wild-type (WT) sample, we obtained 261 DEGs, and the results of GO and KEGG enrichment analysis indicate that MiISE5 can interfere with various metabolic and signaling pathways, especially the JA signaling pathway, to facilitate nematode parasitism. Results from the present study suggest that MiISE5 plays an important role during the early stages of parasitism and provides evidence to decipher the molecular mechanisms underlying the manipulation of host immune defense responses by M. incognita.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Genome and secretome analysis of Pochonia chlamydosporia provide new insight into egg-parasitic mechanisms

Runmao Lin; Feifei Qin; Baoming Shen; Qianqian Shi; Chichuan Liu; Xi Zhang; Yang Jiao; Jun Lu; Yaoyao Gao; Marta Suarez-Fernandez; Federico Lopez-Moya; Luis Vicente Lopez-Llorca; Gang Wang; Zhenchuan Mao; Jian Ling; Yuhong Yang; Xinyue Cheng; Bingyan Xie

Pochonia chlamydosporia infects eggs and females of economically important plant-parasitic nematodes. The fungal isolates parasitizing different nematodes are genetically distinct. To understand their intraspecific genetic differentiation, parasitic mechanisms, and adaptive evolution, we assembled seven putative chromosomes of P. chlamydosporia strain 170 isolated from root-knot nematode eggs (~44 Mb, including 7.19% of transposable elements) and compared them with the genome of the strain 123 (~41 Mb) isolated from cereal cyst nematode. We focus on secretomes of the fungus, which play important roles in pathogenicity and fungus-host/environment interactions, and identified 1,750 secreted proteins, with a high proportion of carboxypeptidases, subtilisins, and chitinases. We analyzed the phylogenies of these genes and predicted new pathogenic molecules. By comparative transcriptome analysis, we found that secreted proteins involved in responses to nutrient stress are mainly comprised of proteases and glycoside hydrolases. Moreover, 32 secreted proteins undergoing positive selection and 71 duplicated gene pairs encoding secreted proteins are identified. Two duplicated pairs encoding secreted glycosyl hydrolases (GH30), which may be related to fungal endophytic process and lost in many insect-pathogenic fungi but exist in nematophagous fungi, are putatively acquired from bacteria by horizontal gene transfer. The results help understanding genetic origins and evolution of parasitism-related genes.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2018

The Novel Secreted Meloidogyne incognita Effector MiISE6 Targets the Host Nucleus and Facilitates Parasitism in Arabidopsis

Qianqian Shi; Zhenchuan Mao; Xiaoping Zhang; Jian Ling; Runmao Lin; Xi Zhang; Rui Liu; Yunsheng Wang; Yuhong Yang; Xinyue Cheng; Bingyan Xie

Meloidogyne incognita is highly specialized parasite that interacts with host plants using a range of strategies. The effectors are synthesized in the esophageal glands and secreted into plant cells through a needle-like stylet during parasitism. In this study, based on RNA-seq and bioinformatics analysis, we predicted 110 putative Meloidogyne incognita effectors that contain nuclear localization signals (NLSs). Combining the Burkholderia glumae–pEDV based screening system with subcellular localization, from 20 randomly selected NLS effector candidates, we identified an effector MiISE6 that can effectively suppress B. glumae-induced cell death in Nicotiana benthamiana, targets to the nuclei of plant cells, and is highly expressed in early parasitic J2 stage. Sequence analysis showed that MiISE6 is a 157-amino acid peptide, with an OGFr_N domain and two NLS motifs. Hybridization in situ verified that MiISE6 is expressed in the subventral esophageal glands. Yeast invertase secretion assay validated the function of the signal peptide harbored in MiISE6. Transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana plants expressing MiISE6 become more susceptible to M. incognita. Inversely, the host-derived RNAi of MiISE6 of the nematode can decrease its parasitism on host. Based on transcriptome analysis of the MiISE6 transgenic Arabidopsis samples and the wild-type samples, we obtained 852 differentially expressed genes (DEGs). Integrating Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) enrichment analyses, we found that expression of MiISE6 in Arabidopsis can suppress jasmonate signaling pathway. In addition, the expression of genes related to cell wall modification and the ubiquitination proteasome pathway also have detectable changes in the transgenic plants. Results from the present study suggest that MiISE6 is involved in interaction between nematode-plant, and plays an important role during the early stages of parasitism by interfering multiple signaling pathways of plant. Moreover, we found homologs of MiISE6 in other sedentary nematodes, Meloidogyne hapla and Globodera pallida. Our experimental results provide evidence to decipher the molecular mechanisms underlying the manipulation of host immune defense responses by plant parasitic nematodes, and transcriptome data also provide useful information for further study nematode–plant interactions.


Journal of Integrative Agriculture | 2016

Characterization and function of Tomato yellow leaf curl virus-derived small RNAs generated in tolerant and susceptible tomato varieties

Miao Bai; Guo-shun Yang; Wen-ting Chen; Runmao Lin; Jian Ling; Zhenchuan Mao; Bingyan Xie

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Baoming Shen

Hunan Agricultural University

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Xinyue Cheng

Beijing Normal University

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Qianqian Shi

China Agricultural University

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Xi Zhang

Beijing Normal University

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Miao Bai

Hunan Agricultural University

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Bei Xin

Beijing Normal University

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Guo-shun Yang

Hunan Agricultural University

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Liangying Dai

Hunan Agricultural University

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Wen-Bing Yin

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wen-ting Chen

Hunan Agricultural University

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