Draft Genome Sequence of Fusarium fujikuroi, a Fungus Adapted to the Fuel Environment

ABSTRACT Fusarium fujikuroi isolate FUS01 is highly adapted to grow in jet fuel with predicted genes involved in hydrocarbon catabolism and carbon assimilation. The draft genome size is estimated at 49 Mb containing 18,578 proteins with high similarity to that of F. fujikuroi isolate B14.

far fewer reports have described the genomes of fuel-adapted fungi (4). The ability of the filamentous fungus Fusarium fujikuroi isolate FUS01 to adapt and grow in fuel-containing environments enthused us to sequence its genome.
A fungal isolate was recovered from a sample of Jet A fuel and identified as F. fujikuroi isolate FUS01 based on morphological characteristics and high similarity (99%) of the 18S rRNA gene to that of F. fujikuroi. Using a whole-genome shotgun approach, TruSeq paired-end libraries were generated and sequenced on a HiSeq 2000 platform, resulting in 49,249,613 paired-end reads with a read length of 100 bp (~4.92 Gb). The raw sequences were trimmed using Trimmomatic (5), and reads shorter than 40 bp were discarded. The sequence reads were de novo assembled with SPAdes software (6). The resulting 49,057,912-bp (100ϫ sequence coverage) draft assembly comprises 881 contigs greater than 500 bp and has an N 50 of 838,232 bp and an L 50 of 16 contigs. The GϩC content of the assembled genome is 47.34%, which is less than the 48.3% GϩC content of F. fujikuroi isolate B14 (GenBank accession number ANFV00000000), the causal agent of the bakanae disease of rice (7). CEGMA (8) was then run on the draft assembly and identified 243 out of 248 ultraconserved eukaryotic genes in F. fujikuroi isolate FUS01 (97.98%). After masking repetitive sequences (2.80%) using the RepeatMasker program (9), the masked genome was used for gene prediction by AUGUSTUS version 2.5.5 (10) with an option set for F. graminearum parameters, resulting in 18,578 protein-coding genes.
The KEGG database and BLASTp research identified important proteins related to biofilm formation (agglutinin-like proteins, n ϭ 17) and efflux of toxic substances (efflux pumps, n ϭ 74), which are well studied in bacteria (2), suggesting a common mechanism of hydrocarbon adaptation between bacteria and fungi. Similarly, proteins involved in carbon metabolism (n ϭ 81) and degradation of aromatic compounds (n ϭ 9), such as benzoate 4-monooxygenase and cyclohexanone monooxygenase, are found. In agree-ment with the capability of FUS01 to adapt and grow in fuel, we found genes involved in the oxidation of alkanes. These genes include the AlkB-related alkane hydroxylases CYP153 and CYP505 and the n-alkane-inducible cytochrome P-450 (13). Information from the current genome will facilitate an understanding of the mechanisms underlying fungal adaptation to, growth in, and degradation of hydrocarbon fuels.
Accession number(s). This whole-genome shotgun project has been deposited at DDBJ/ENA/GenBank under the accession number NCQQ00000000. The version described in this paper is the second version, NCQQ02000000.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This material is based on research sponsored by AFRL/RQTF under agreement FA8650-16-2-2605. The U.S. Government is authorized to reproduce and distribute reprints for governmental purposes notwithstanding any copyright notation thereon. The views and conclusions contained herein are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as necessarily representing the official policies or endorsements, either expressed or implied, of AFRL/RQTF or the U.S. Government.