Evolutionary Dynamics and Functional Bifurcation of the C2H2 Gene Family in Basidiomycota
Chao Duan, Jie Yang

TL;DR
This study explores how the C2H2 gene family evolved in fungi, revealing how these genes help fungi adapt to different environments and develop structures like fruiting bodies.
Contribution
The study identifies lineage-specific gene expansions and functional roles of C2H2 genes in fungal development and adaptation.
Findings
C2H2 genes show lineage-specific expansions in wood decayers and edible fungi.
Saprotrophs retain long genes with many introns, while pathogens have streamlined genomes.
Stage-specific C2H2 gene expression coordinates developmental transitions in Sarcomyxa edulis.
Abstract
This study performed a phylogenomic analysis of the C2H2 gene family across 30 Basidiomycota species, identifying 1032 genes distributed across six evolutionary clades (Groups I–VI). Functional diversification and lineage-specific expansions were observed: Group II (37.1%) formed a conserved core, while wood decayers (e.g., Schizophyllum commune) and edible fungi (e.g., Pleurotus ostreatus) exhibited clade-specific expansions in Groups III and V, respectively. Physicochemical profiling revealed an acidic bias in Agaricomycotina proteins (pI 4.3–5.8) compared to alkaline trends in pathogens (Ustilaginomycotina/Pucciniomycotina; pI 8.3–8.6). Comparative genomics indicated that saprotrophs retained long genes (12.4 kb) with abundant introns (mean = 6.2/gene), whereas pathogens exhibited genomic streamlining (introns ≤ 2). Synteny network analysis revealed high ancestral conservation in…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant Interactions · Fungal Biology and Applications · Fermentation and Sensory Analysis
