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Population Polymorphism of Nuclear Mitochondrial DNA Insertions Reveals Widespread Diploidy Associated with Loss of Heterozygosity in Debaryomyces hansenii
Authors:Noémie Jacques  Christine Sacerdot  Meriem Derkaoui  Bernard Dujon  Odile Ozier-Kalogeropoulos  Serge Casaregola
Institution:1.CIRM-Levures, Microbiologie et Génétique Moléculaire, INRA UMR 1238, CNRS UMR 2585, AgroParisTech, F-78850 Thiverval-Grignon, France, and ;2.Institut Pasteur, Unité de Génétique Moléculaire des Levures, CNRS, URA 2171, Université Pierre et Marie Curie-Paris 06, UFR 927, F-75015 Paris, France
Abstract:Debaryomyces hansenii, a yeast that participates in the elaboration of foodstuff, displays important genetic diversity. Our recent phylogenetic classification of this species led to the subdivision of the species into three distinct clades. D. hansenii harbors the highest number of nuclear mitochondrial DNA (NUMT) insertions known so far for hemiascomycetous yeasts. Here we assessed the intraspecific variability of the NUMTs in this species by testing their presence/absence first in 28 strains, with 21 loci previously detected in the completely sequenced strain CBS 767T, and second in a larger panel of 77 strains, with 8 most informative loci. We were able for the first time to structure populations in D. hansenii, although we observed little NUMT insertion variability within the clades. We determined the chronology of the NUMT insertions, which turned out to correlate with the previously defined taxonomy and provided additional evidence that colonization of nuclear genomes by mitochondrial DNA is a dynamic process in yeast. In combination with flow cytometry experiments, the NUMT analysis revealed the existence of both haploid and diploid strains, the latter being heterozygous and resulting from at least four crosses among strains from the various clades. As in the diploid pathogen Candida albicans, to which D. hansenii is phylogenetically related, we observed a differential loss of heterozygosity in the diploid strains, which can explain some of the large genetic diversity found in D. hansenii over the years.Debaryomyces hansenii is a ubiquist, hemiascomycetous yeast that can be found in soil, fruits, and various manufactured foodstuff in which it participates by contributing to the maturation or as a contaminant. Its ability to grow at low temperatures and in high salinity environments makes it the most common yeast in cheeses, to which it brings a number of proteolytic and lipolytic activities and aromas in the course of maturation. D. hansenii has also been implicated as an emerging pathogen, sometimes under the name of Candida famata var. famata (see reference 17). Taxonomic classification of the species related to D. hansenii has always been subject to debate. Recent analyses have reinstated D. hansenii (previously D. hansenii var. hansenii), Debaryomyces fabryi (previously D. hansenii var. fabryi), and Debaryomyces subglobosus (previously Candida famata var. flareri) (13, 25). Phylogenetic analysis using conserved spliceosomal intron sequence comparison has shown that D. hansenii is a complex of species, which comprises at least four members: D. hansenii, Debaryomyces tyrocola, D. fabryi, and Candida flareri (previously Candida famata var. flareri) (18). In addition, our study has revealed the existence of at least three populations (clades 1 to 3) in D. hansenii, with the first one containing the strain CBS 767T, which has been entirely sequenced (8), and the last one containing Candida famata var. famata CBS 1795.Most eukaryotic nuclear genomes contain pieces of mitochondrial sequences (designated NUMT nuclear mitochondrial DNA] for nuclear sequences of mitochondrial origin) that result from the transfer of fragments of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) to the chromosomes. The number and size of the NUMTs varies greatly between eukaryotic genomes (33). A recent investigation of six hemiascomycetous yeasts has shown that even within this monophyletic group, the number of NUMTs varies greatly, from 1 in Kluyveromyces thermotolerans CBS 6340T to 145 in D. hansenii CBS 767T (36). The mtDNA is thought to invade nuclear genomes during the repair of chromosomal DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) by nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ), as shown experimentally in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (31, 44). The colonization of nuclear genomes by mtDNA is a dynamic evolutionary process, as observed in yeast and humans (3, 32).D. hansenii harbors the highest number of NUMTs known so far for hemiascomycetous yeasts, making it of particular interest for NUMT studies. Conversely, NUMTs are potentially interesting markers to differentiate strains of this species. The 145 NUMTs of type strain CBS 767T are distributed in 86 loci (61 single NUMTs and 25 clusters). Most clusters (23, 25) are mosaics of NUMTs formed from noncontiguous mtDNA fragments inserted in random orientation at the same chromosomal locus. In the other two clusters, the NUMTs are all in the same orientation and order, as in the mitochondrial genome. These clusters (designated “processions”) correspond to a single ancient mtDNA insertion, followed by mutational decay, leaving recognizable mtDNA segments separated by more diverged sequences (36).Few studies have attempted to evaluate the variability of NUMTs within the same species (2, 23, 32). Here, we have studied natural isolates to assess the intraspecific variability of the NUMT insertions in the nuclear genome of the yeast species D. hansenii. We were able to structure populations in this species, to determine the chronology of the NUMT insertions, and to correlate this chronology to the taxonomy of the D. hansenii complex species. Moreover, NUMT analysis revealed the existence of both haploid and diploid strains, the latter resulting from crosses between different D. hansenii clades.
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