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Review Tansley insight Comparative phylogenomics of symbiotic associations Author for correspondence: Pierre-Marc Delaux Tel: +33 0 5 34 32 38 38 Email: [email protected] Pierre-Marc Delaux Laboratoire de Recherche en Sciences Vegetales, Universite de Toulouse, CNRS, UPS, 24 chemin de Borde Rouge, Auzeville, BP42617, 31326, Castanet Tolosan, France Received: 10 May 2016 Accepted: 19 July 2016 Contents Summary 89 IV. Discovery of new symbiotic genes 91 I. Introduction 89 V. 92 II. AM symbiosis in plants: one gain and multiple losses 90 VI. Conclusion 93 III. Evolution of AM symbiosis-related genes 90 References 93 Future perspectives Summary New Phytologist (2017) 213: 89–94 doi: 10.1111/nph.14161 Key words: arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis, evolution, genomics, phylogeny, plant–microbe associations. Understanding the genetic bases of complex traits has been a main challenge in biology for decades. Comparative phylogenomics offers an opportunity to identify candidate genes associated with these complex traits. This approach initially developed in prokaryotes consists in looking at shared coevolution between genes and traits. It thus requires a precise reconstruction of the trait evolution, a large genomic sampling in the clades of interest and an accurate definition of orthogroups. Recently, with the growing body of sequenced plant genomes, comparative genomics has been successfully applied to plants to study the widespread arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis. Here I will use these findings to illustrate the main principles of comparative phylogenomic approaches and propose directions to improve our understanding of symbiotic associations. I. Introduction Comparative phylogenomic approaches link genomic features to traits in a phylogenetic context. While these approaches have mostly been used to define the evolution of known gene networks, they have the potential to identify new genetic components controlling part of the phenotypic variability in the species space of interest (Eisen, 1998). Initially developed in bacteria (Pellegrini et al., 1999), it has been successfully expanded to eukaryotes over the last few years and resulted in the discovery of genes involved in cilia development (AvidorReiss et al., 2004) or the identification of small-RNA pathway genes (Tabach et al., 2013). In plants, there has so far been a limited use of such an approach. Ó 2016 The Author New Phytologist Ó 2016 New Phytologist Trust The arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis is a mutualistic association formed between plants and fungi of the Glomeromycota, also called AM fungi (Box 1). During this association, the fungus colonizes the host plant and develops intracellular highly branched structures known as arbuscules. When established, the association results in an exchange of nutrients between the two partners (Parniske, 2008). While plant genes controlling this association have been identified by genetics in model angiosperms, the symbiotic gene set remains incomplete (Gutjahr & Parniske, 2013). Comparative phylogenomics is thus a promising option to identify symbiotic genes in a comprehensive manner. Rather than providing a methodological guide, the goal here is to illustrate, with the recent advances made by applying comparative phylogenomics to the AM symbiosis, the three steps required for a New Phytologist (2017) 213: 89–94 89 www.newphytologist.com 90 Review Tansley insight Box 1 Viridiplantae – a kingdom also known as the green lineage. Composed by Chlorophyte algae such as Chlamydomonas reinhardtii or Ostreococcus spp., the six orders of Charophyte algae (Mesostigmatales, Chlorokybales, Klebsormidiales, Charales, Coleochaetales and Zygnematales) and Embryophytes. Embryophytes – these encompass nonvascular plants belonging to the liverwort, hornwort and moss clades as well as the protracheophytes (extinct) and tracheophytes (vascular plants). The term is widely used as a synonym for land plants but some lineages belonging to the Embryophytes do not actually live on land, such as the sea grass Zostera marina. Glomeromycota – a monophyletic group of obligate biotrophic fungi that all form the arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis with most Embryophytes. They are also called arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. So far there is no evidence of nonsymbiotic fungi in this clade. Ectomycorrhizas (ECM) – beneficial associations between various seed plants and fungi belonging to the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota. During these interactions the ECM fungus colonizes plant roots to form a hyphal network between epidermal and cortical cells, known as the Hartig net. successful analysis: clearly define the evolution of the trait; identify the phylogenetic pattern of known genes linked to the trait; and identify genome-wide genes following that specific pattern (Fig. 1). Directions in which these approaches could be expanded in the future are also proposed. II. AM symbiosis in plants: one gain and multiple losses Reconstructing the evolution of a trait relies on a robust species tree. For Embryophytes (Box 1), several nodes remain debated, such as the position of liverworts, mosses and hornworts relative to the tracheophytes or the branching order between the main Gymnosperm lineages (Wickett et al., 2014). These uncertainties need to be taken into account when investigating trait or gene evolution (Sayou et al., 2014). Given its widespread occurrence in 80% of the Embryophytes, including liverworts and hornworts, it has been proposed that the AM symbiosis has a single and ancient origin at the base of the Embryophytes (Bonfante & Genre, 2008; Field et al., 2015). In addition, the fossil record confirmed the presence of AM fungi and AM-like associations in the earliest land plant fossils (Remy et al., 1994; Redecker et al., 2000; Strullu-Derrien et al., 2014). While ancestral state reconstruction of the AM symbiosis in Embryophytes remains to be performed to further test this hypothesis, the other evolutionary scenario – independent gains – is currently not supported. With the AM symbiosis as the likely ancestral trait in Embryophytes, its absence in various clades would correspond to independent losses. Identifying losses requires a precise phenotyping in controlled conditions. Several events have been well characterized. For instance, studying 36 Lupinus species and 10 closely related species, it has been demonstrated that the loss of AM symbiosis occurred at the base of this genus (Oba et al., New Phytologist (2017) 213: 89–94 www.newphytologist.com New Phytologist 2012). Similarly, a loss occurred in the Brassicales order just before the divergence of the Limnanthaceae (Delaux et al., 2014). These specific evolutionary features, origin in first land plants and the subsequent losses in various lineages, define a phylogenetic context to study the evolution of the associated gene networks. III. Evolution of AM symbiosis-related genes Genetic analyses conducted in angiosperms led to the identification of plant genes regulating the AM symbiosis. With the evolution of AM symbiosis well mapped on the species tree for several clades, as indicated earlier, phylogenetic studies on these symbiotic genes would allow the reconstruction of their evolution in plants. Given the ancient origin of the AM symbiosis, the entire Viridiplantae lineage is an appropriate scale to conduct such analyses. A consistent phylogenetic analysis relies on the comprehensive coverage of the species space with an appropriate sequencing depth. Until recently, genomic and transcriptomic data were available for only a limited number of taxa, mostly angiosperm species with only a few exceptions such as the moss Physcomitrella patens (Lang et al., 2008).While recently sequenced genomes improved this coverage (i.e. Amborella trichopoda, Chamala et al., 2013; Klebsormidium flaccidum, Hori et al., 2014) many clades still lack sampling. To tackle this limitation, the 1 KP initiative (https:// sites.google.com/a/ualberta.ca/onekp/) sequenced transcriptomes for over 1400 species covering the entire breadth of the green lineage. This dataset already resulted in a strong improvement of our understanding of plant phylogeny (Wickett et al., 2014; Rothfels et al., 2015) and of the evolution of key proteins such as photoreceptors (Li et al., 2014). Using these combined datasets, it has been possible to infer the origin and evolution of genes previously identified in angiosperms for their involvement in AM symbiosis (Delaux et al., 2015). Two main evolutionary origins for symbiotic genes were found. Genes involved in colonization and arbuscule formation evolved in first land plants, probably together with the AM symbiosis itself (Bonfante & Genre, 2008; Delaux et al., 2015). More surprising was the finding of orthologs of genes involved in the initial recognition of AM fungi, and downstream early signaling, in advanced charophyte algae, the closest relative to embryophytes not known to associate with AM fungi (Delaux et al., 2015). This suggests that the last common ancestor of embryophytes and charophytes already had the genes involved in early symbiotic signaling that were later recruited for AM symbiosis during the terrestrialization process. Besides defining their origins, the accumulation of plant genomes and transcriptomes allowed the conservation of the symbiotic genes in nonhost species to be studied. By combining phylogenetic and synteny analyses, it has been determined that the loss of AM symbiosis in multiple angiosperm lineages perfectly correlates with the loss of most AM symbiosis-related genes (Delaux et al., 2014), a finding recently confirmed using independent phylogenetic approaches (Favre et al., 2014; Bravo et al., 2016). This suggests that conservation of these genes over millions of years might only have been driven by the symbiotic association. Taken together, these findings define a specific phylogenetic pattern for the known AM symbiosis-related genes. They are all Ó 2016 The Author New Phytologist Ó 2016 New Phytologist Trust New Phytologist Tansley insight Angiosperms Species tree Review 91 Trait Gymnosperms Lycophytes Protracheophytes Hornworts Embryophytes Monilophytes Trait evolution Genes Mosses Liverworts Charophytes Limnanthaceae Caricaceae Phylogenetic pattern Brassicales Later-diverging Brassicales Candidate genes and pathways Moringaceae Malvaceae Symbiotic genes Lupinus spp. Cytisus Genista Other Papilionoideae Legumes Laburnum Genomes Hosts Nonhost Nonhost Nonhost c. 150 candidates Fig. 1 Principles of comparative phylogenomics illustrated with arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis. Comparative phylogenomics relies on three aspects: trait evolution, phylogenetic pattern of known genes, and identification of candidate genes and pathways. Trait evolution is determined by inferring the occurrence of a trait on a species tree. Left-hand (orange) box, AM symbiosis evolved only once after the divergence of the Charophyte algae and the Embryophytes and got lost multiple times independently (red branches) at multiple levels: a large clade (Mosses), an order (most families in the Brassicales), or a genus (Lupinus). A phylogenetic pattern is determined by comparing the occurrence of known genes with the occurrence of the trait. Middle (green) box, AM symbiosis-related genes are conserved in host species (blue rectangles) and absent from nonhost species (red rectangles). Identification of candidate genes and pathways relies on genome comparisons to identify genes following the phylogenetic pattern. Right-hand (brown) box, genes present in all host species are identified (blue circle) and their presence in the genome of nonhost species (red circles) is determined. This comparison allowed for the identification of c. 150 candidate genes (Delaux et al., 2014; Bravo et al., 2016). ancestral to the radiation of the angiosperms and most of them are absent in nonrelated, nonhost species. Box 2 IV. Discovery of new symbiotic genes Orthogroup – in a given set of species, a group of genes that are descended from a single gene in their last common ancestor. The remaining step was to identify genes following the specific phylogenetic pattern defined earlier in a genome-wide manner using so-called comparative phylogenomic approaches (Eisen, 1998). Recently, three studies conducted such an approach to identify candidate symbiotic genes (Delaux et al., 2014; Favre et al., 2014; Bravo et al., 2016). In other words, these studies tried to determine for each gene present in the genomes of all host plants whether an orthologous gene is present in even a single genome of nonhost species. For this purpose, orthogroups (Box 2) were defined and the ones containing genes from nonhost species or only a few host species were filtered out. Over the two last decades, several algorithms have been developed to accurately define orthogroups, the most popular ones being based on the INPARANOID method (Remm et al., 2001). These approaches start with the collection of homologous sequences by BLAST on the species of interest, using as a query all protein models from one of them. In classic analysis, the MCL algorithm, or a derivative, then Ó 2016 The Author New Phytologist Ó 2016 New Phytologist Trust Species tree – a phylogenetic tree showing the relationship between taxa sharing a common ancestor. Symbiotic trait – refers to the ability of an organism to participate in a given symbiotic association. clusters highly similar sequences in groups (Emms & Kelly, 2015). However, this clustering step is intrinsically dependent on its stringency parameters and may result on the exclusion of orthologous but divergent genes. In the Delaux et al. study this step resulted in the exclusion of nonhost sequences from orthogroups. As these genes were excluded at this stage, the phylogenetic tree generated for each orthogroup in the subsequent step was obviously devoid of these nonhost species and thus included in the list of candidate symbiotic genes absent from nonhost species (Delaux et al., 2014). By contrast, Bravo et al. New Phytologist (2017) 213: 89–94 www.newphytologist.com 92 Review Tansley insight (2016) did not include such a clustering step and directly built phylogenetic trees on the collected sequences after a single curation step to reduce the total number of sequences while maintaining species diversity. This ultimately resulted in the conservation of more divergent sequences in the dataset used to generate phylogenetic trees. In both cases, phylogenetic trees were constructed with each orthogroup, reconciled with the species tree and rooted. Various pipelines have been designed to then identify orthogroups matching the pattern of interest (Lee et al., 2011; Nagy et al., 2014). In the case of the AM symbiosis, this pattern was the conservation in host dicots, absence in nonhost species and presence in monocots. While the three studies searched this pattern, the main differences in the species used resulted in striking differences. Similarly to the use of a clustering method, as described earlier, a reduced number of nonhost species results in the identification of a large number of false positives in the list of candidate genes (i.e. genes actually present in nonhost species and thus not specific to host species). For instance, Favre et al. (2014) used only three nonhost Brassicaceae, resulting in the identification of > 5000 candidate genes. Most of them are Brassicaceae-specific losses, not consistently related to the loss of the AM symbiosis. The two other studies used different sets of nonhost species. In the future, combining these two sets will provide the potential to improve the list of predicted symbiotic genes. It is worth noting here that the species included have to be carefully checked for their symbiotic behavior and for the occurrence of the correlation between absence of known genes and loss of the trait. For instance, the presence of the symbiotic gene DMI3 in Nelumbo nucifera suggests that the selection on symbiotic genes in this species might be different from that in other nonhost species, as has been described in mosses (Wang et al., 2010). These studies provided lists of candidate genes and, more importantly, proved that comparative phylogenomics has the potential to strongly improve our understanding of plant–microbe associations. V. Future perspectives With its presumed single origin and multiple losses, the AM symbiosis has been a very tractable model for comparative phylogenomics. Expansion in two directions is now required to fully benefit from this approach. First, while the initial analyses focused mainly on the correlation between trait loss and gene loss, more subtle evolutionary patterns could be tracked. Indeed, it can be anticipated that genes involved in multiple pathways will be retained in nonhost species after the loss of the AM symbiosis. However, despite their conservation, features specific to their symbiotic function are likely to be lost in nonhost lineages, potentially leading to a detectable switch in selection. Supporting this idea, it has been found that NSP1 and NSP2, two symbiotic GRAS transcription factors also controlling the biosynthesis of the plant hormone strigolactones (Liu et al., 2011), are under relaxed selection in the Brassicaceae (Delaux et al., 2013). Expanding this analysis to genome-wide comparisons would lead to the identification of additional symbiotic components. Even beyond selective pressure on codons, detecting discriminating synonymous New Phytologist (2017) 213: 89–94 www.newphytologist.com New Phytologist mutations between host and nonhost species could be extremely informative. The second way in which comparative phylogenomics could be expanded is for the study of other beneficial plant–microbe interactions. The phylogenetic pattern so far supported for the AM symbiosis on the plant side, a single origin and multiple losses, was the most favorable option to study. Indeed, convergent losses are detectable, assuming a reliable identification of orthogroups. Unfortunately, most other described symbiotic plant–microbe interactions followed completely different evolutionary trajectories. Even staying with the AM symbiosis but switching from the plant side to the AM fungi side leads to a more complicated picture. As for plants, there is evidence of a single origin, at the base of the Glomeromycota. However, no loss has been identified. Thus, looking for genome-wide presence/absence patterns between AM fungi and their closest relatives would result in the identification of genes associated with the evolution of the Glomeromycota without specificity for the symbiotic ones. Facing the same issue of single evolution of a trait in a given lineage, evolutionary developmental studies have integrated transcriptomics in the same evolutionary context (Ichihashi et al., 2014). Combining comparative transcriptomics of various AM fungi in symbiotic conditions and comparative phylogenomics of AM fungi and their close relatives thus offers a unique opportunity to understand the basis of symbiosis in this fungal clade. By contrast to the single origin of AM symbiosis in the Glomeromycota, the ability to form ectomycorrhizal symbiosis evolved independently > 60 times in Fungi and resulted in very similar associations at the phenotypic and even physiologic levels, a clear example of convergent evolution (Tedersoo et al., 2010). A massive genomic effort has been undertaken for these fungi and their close saprotrophic relatives, allowing for comparative phylogenomic approaches to be performed (Kohler et al., 2015). Using this unique dataset, Kohler et al. (2015) investigated convergent evolution of ectomycorrhizas (ECM) in nine fungal lineages. Transcriptomics conducted on the same species space, revealed many features specific to each ECM lineage, highlighting the multiple molecular ways to reach the same trait in a convergent manner. It can be now anticipated that these combinations of phylogenomics and transcriptomics will shed light on the mechanisms allowing the evolution of other well described beneficial plant–microbe interactions, such as root nodulation, plant– cyanobacteria symbioses (Adams & Duggan, 2008), the plant side of the ectomycorrhizal symbioses (Garcia et al., 2015) or the ericoid and orchid mycorrhizae (Weiß et al., 2016). Although they probably represent the most successful ones, based on their spread and ecological benefits, beneficial associations can no longer be restricted to these described symbioses. As exemplified by the specialized interaction recently described between Colletotrichum tofeldiae and Arabidopsis thaliana, other associations benefiting the plant partner occur in a species- or clade-specific manner (Hiruma et al., 2016). With metagenomic approaches strongly improving the ability to detect associated microbes, it is now possible to envision creating catalogs of interacting microorganisms for the entire plant lineage. The coverage of the genomic space provided by projects such as the 1KP initiative, and the sequencing of more plant genomes that are more reliable than transcriptomic data, or Ó 2016 The Author New Phytologist Ó 2016 New Phytologist Trust New Phytologist the 1K fungal genome project (http://1000.fungalgenomes.org) will provide the basis for defining genomic features associated with taxa in a comprehensive manner. In the earlier mentioned association between Colletotrichum and Arabidopsis, the authors found that Colletotrichum was not able to interact symbiotically with another Brassicaceae, Capsella rubella, that does not produce indole glucosinolate, which is important in Arabidopsis to restrict fungal growth (Hiruma et al., 2016). By contrast, Cardamine hirsuta, which produces indole glucosinolate-like Arabidopsis, fully benefits from the association (Hiruma et al., 2016). Such a correlation could be extended to other Brassicales species and should correlate, if valid, with the presence/absence of the enzymes specifically controlling the production of these glucosinolates. Similarities between microbial communities associated with distantly related species such as Barley and Arabidopsis have been observed (Hacquard et al., 2015). This suggests the existence of potential highly conserved associations in plants that, in addition to being characterized as beneficial, neutral or pathogen, could be functionally studied using comparative phylogenomics to identify candidate genes. VI. Conclusion Genetic, transcriptomic and genomic approaches have led to huge advances in our understanding of symbiotic associations. 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