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Review
.2010 Aug;27(8):479-88.
doi: 10.1002/yea.1787.

On the evolution of fungal and yeast cell walls

Affiliations
Review

On the evolution of fungal and yeast cell walls

Xianfa Xie et al. Yeast.2010 Aug.

Abstract

Recent developments in genomics and proteomics provide evidence that yeast and other fungal cell walls share a common origin. The fibrous component of yeast cell walls usually consists of beta-glucan and/or chitin. N-glycosylated proteins form an amorphous, cross-linking matrix as well as fibres on the outer surfaces of the walls. While the enzymes responsible for cross-linking walls into covalent complexes are conserved, the wall-resident proteins have diversified rapidly. These cell wall proteins are usually members of multi-gene families, and paralogues are often subject to gene silencing through epigenetic mechanisms and environmentally induced expression regulation. Comparative studies of protein sequences reveal that there has been fast sequence divergence of the Saccharomyces sexual agglutinins, potentially serving as a driver for yeast speciation. In addition, cell wall proteins show an unusually high content of tandem and non-tandem repeats, and a high frequency of changes in the number of repeats both among paralogues and among orthologues from conspecific strains. The rapid diversification and regulated expression of yeast cell wall proteins help yeast cells to respond to different stimuli and adapt them to diverse biotic and abiotic environments.

Copyright (c) 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Some representative organisms and the major components of their cell walls or extracellular matrices. Four representative eukaryote kingdoms are: 1, fungi; 2, animals; 3, amoebazoa; and 4, plants. The fungal phyla are: A, ascomycetes; B, basidiomycetes; and C, microsporidia
Figure 2
Figure 2
Cartoon model of the cell wall of an ascomycetous yeast. The general arrangement includes polysaccharides (lines) and glycoproteins (ellipsoids). The specific structures are: 1, chitin; 2, β1,3-glucan; 3, β1,6-glucan; 4, glycoprotein–glutamyl–glycoester bonds; 5, glycoprotein GPI-glycan remnant linked to β1,6-glucan; 6, glycoproteinO-glycan chain; 7, glycoproteinN-glycan chain; and 8, disulphide bond. Reprinted with permission of Elsevier from Gonzalezet al. (2009) [25]
Figure 3
Figure 3
Fractions of cell wall protein sequences that are in motifs (tandem or dispersed repeats), grouped by decile. The total length of the repeated elements found in each cell wall protein was divided by the length of the protein. Reprinted with permission from Coronadoet al. 2007 [15]
Figure 4
Figure 4
Expression and interactions of sexual adhesins inS. cerevisiae. Double-headed arrows denote the interactions among the adhesins [19,60]. Each of these genes has a high rate of non-synonymous substitutions betweenSaccharomyces species
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