The causal agent of root and butt rot of conifer trees, , is widespread in boreal forests and economically responsible for annual loss of approximately 50 million euros to forest industries in Finland alone and much more at European level. In order to further understand the pathobiology of this fungus at the genome level, a Finnish isolate of (isolate 03012) was sequenced and analyzed with the genome sequences of 23 white-rot and 13 brown-rot fungi. The draft genome assembly of has a size of 31.01 Mb, containing 11,453 predicted genes. Whole genome alignment showed that 84.38% of genome sequences were aligned with those of previously sequenced TC 32-1 counterparts. The result is further supported by the protein sequence clustering analysis which revealed that the two genomes share 6719 out of 8647 clusters. When sequencing reads of were aligned against the genome sequences of , six single nucleotide polymorphisms were found in every 1 kb, on average. In addition, 98.68% of SNPs were found to be homo-variants, suggesting that the two species have long evolved from different niches. Gene family analysis revealed that most of the white-rot fungi investigated had more gene families involved in lignin degradation or modification, including laccases and peroxidase. Comparative analysis of the two spp. as well as white-/brown-rot fungi would provide new insights for understanding the pathobiology of the conifer tree pathogen.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5654758PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gdata.2017.10.003DOI Listing

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