Starship giant transposons dominate plastic genomic regions in a fungal plant pathogen and drive virulence evolution

Publication date

2025-07-24

Authors

Sato, Yukiyo
Bex, Roos
van den Berg, Grardy C M
Santhanam, Parthasarathy
Höfte, Monica
Seidl, MichaelISNI 0000000419459866
Thomma, Bart P H J

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Starships form a recently discovered superfamily of giant transposons in Pezizomycotina fungi, implicated in mediating horizontal transfer of diverse cargo genes between fungal genomes. Their elusive nature has long obscured their significance, and their impact on genome evolution remains poorly understood. Here, we reveal a surprising abundance and diversity of Starships in the phytopathogenic fungus Verticillium dahliae. Remarkably, Starships dominate the plastic genomic compartments involved in host colonization, carry multiple virulence-associated genes, and exhibit genetic and epigenetic characteristics associated with adaptive genome evolution. Phylogenetic analyses suggest extensive horizontal transfer of Starships between Verticillium species and, strikingly, from distantly related Fusarium fungi. Finally, homology searches and phylogenetic analyses suggest that a Starship contributed to de novo virulence gene formation. Our findings illuminate the profound influence of Starship dynamics on fungal genome evolution and the development of virulence.

Keywords

Ascomycota/genetics, DNA Transposable Elements/genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Gene Transfer, Horizontal, Genome, Fungal/genetics, Phylogeny, Plant Diseases/microbiology, Verticillium, Virulence/genetics

Citation

Sato, Y, Bex, R, van den Berg, G C M, Santhanam, P, Höfte, M, Seidl, M F & Thomma, B P H J 2025, 'Starship giant transposons dominate plastic genomic regions in a fungal plant pathogen and drive virulence evolution', Nature Communications, vol. 16, no. 1, 6806. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-61986-6