The ascomycete fungus
Beauveria bassiana
is a pathogen of hundreds of insect species and is commercially produced as an environmentally friendly mycoinsecticide. We sequenced the genome of
B. bassiana
and a phylogenomic analysis confirmed that ascomycete entomopathogenicity is polyphyletic, but also revealed convergent evolution to insect pathogenicity. We also found many species-specific virulence genes and gene family expansions and contractions that correlate with host ranges and pathogenic strategies. These include
B. bassiana
having many more bacterial-like toxins (suggesting an unsuspected potential for oral toxicity) and effector-type proteins. The genome also revealed that
B. bassiana
resembles the closely related
Cordyceps militaris
in being heterothallic, although its sexual stage is rarely observed. A high throughput RNA-seq transcriptomic analysis revealed that
B. bassiana
could sense and adapt to different environmental niches by activating well-defined gene sets. The information from this study will facilitate further development of
B. bassiana
as a cost-effective mycoinsecticide.
Transition-metal activated phosphors are an important family of luminescent materials that can produce white light with an outstanding color rendering index and correlated color temperature for use in light-emitting diodes.
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