Intraspecific Comparative Genomics of Candida albicans Mitochondria Reveals Non-Coding Regions Under Neutral Evolution
Thais F. Bartelli, Renata C. Ferreira, Arnaldo L. Colombo, Marcelo, R. S. Briones

TL;DR
This study sequenced and compared mitochondrial genomes of Candida albicans isolates, identifying highly variable non-coding regions under neutral evolution that can enhance molecular typing and epidemiological studies.
Contribution
It identifies and characterizes highly variable mitochondrial intergenic regions in C. albicans useful for strain differentiation and epidemiology, expanding molecular typing tools.
Findings
Identified three highly variable intergenic regions with neutral evolution.
Observed geographical clustering of strains based on mitochondrial polymorphisms.
Demonstrated potential of mitochondrial intergenic regions for molecular epidemiology.
Abstract
The opportunistic fungal pathogen Candida albicans causes serious hematogenic hospital acquired candidiasis with worldwide impact on public health. Because of its importance as a nosocomial etiologic agent, C. albicans genome has been largely studied to identify intraspecific variation and several typing methods have been developed to distinguish closely related strains. Mitochondrial DNA can be useful for this purpose because, as compared to nuclear DNA, its higher mutational load and evolutionary rate readily reveals microvariants. Accordingly, we sequenced and assembled, with 8 fold coverage, the mitochondrial genomes of two C. albicans clinical isolates (L296 and L757) and compared these sequences with the genome sequence of reference strain SC5314. The genome alignment of 33,928 positions revealed 372 polymorphic sites being 230 in coding and 142 in non-coding regions. Three…
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