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1.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact ; 37(6): 530-541, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38552146

RESUMEN

Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. fragariae (Fof) race 1 is avirulent on cultivars with the dominant resistance gene FW1, while Fof race 2 is virulent on FW1-resistant cultivars. We hypothesized there was a gene-for-gene interaction between a gene at the FW1 locus and an avirulence gene (AvrFW1) in Fof race 1. To identify a candidate AvrFW1, we compared genomes of 24 Fof race 1 and three Fof race 2 isolates. We found one candidate gene that was present in race 1, was absent in race 2, was highly expressed in planta, and was homologous to a known effector, secreted in xylem 6 (SIX6). We knocked out SIX6 in two Fof race 1 isolates by homologous recombination. All SIX6 knockout transformants (ΔSIX6) gained virulence on FW1/fw1 cultivars, whereas ectopic transformants and the wildtype isolates remained avirulent. ΔSIX6 isolates were quantitatively less virulent on FW1/fw1 cultivars Fronteras and San Andreas than fw1/fw1 cultivars. Seedlings from an FW1/fw1 × fw1/fw1 population were genotyped for FW1 and tested for susceptibility to a SIX6 knockout isolate. Results suggested that additional minor-effect quantitative resistance genes could be present at the FW1 locus. This work demonstrates that SIX6 acts as an avirulence factor interacting with a resistance gene at the FW1 locus. The identification of AvrFW1 enables surveillance for Fof race 2 and provides insight into the mechanisms of FW1-mediated resistance. [Formula: see text] Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.


Asunto(s)
Resistencia a la Enfermedad , Fragaria , Fusarium , Enfermedades de las Plantas , Fusarium/patogenicidad , Fusarium/genética , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Virulencia , Fragaria/microbiología , Resistencia a la Enfermedad/genética , Proteínas Fúngicas/genética , Proteínas Fúngicas/metabolismo , Proteínas de Plantas/genética , Proteínas de Plantas/metabolismo , Xilema/microbiología
2.
Hortic Res ; 11(2): uhad289, 2024 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38487295

RESUMEN

Two decades have passed since the strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa) disease caused by Macrophomina phaseolina, a necrotrophic soilborne fungal pathogen, began surfacing in California, Florida, and elsewhere. This disease has since become one of the most common causes of plant death and yield losses in strawberry. The Macrophomina problem emerged and expanded in the wake of the global phase-out of soil fumigation with methyl bromide and appears to have been aggravated by an increase in climate change-associated abiotic stresses. Here we show that sources of resistance to this pathogen are rare in gene banks and that the favorable alleles they carry are phenotypically unobvious. The latter were exposed by transgressive segregation and selection in populations phenotyped for resistance to Macrophomina under heat and drought stress. The genetic gains were immediate and dramatic. The frequency of highly resistant individuals increased from 1% in selection cycle 0 to 74% in selection cycle 2. Using GWAS and survival analysis, we found that phenotypic selection had increased the frequencies of favorable alleles among 10 loci associated with resistance and that favorable alleles had to be accumulated among four or more of these loci for an individual to acquire resistance. An unexpectedly straightforward solution to the Macrophomina disease resistance breeding problem emerged from our studies, which showed that highly resistant cultivars can be developed by genomic selection per se or marker-assisted stacking of favorable alleles among a comparatively small number of large-effect loci.

3.
Phytopathology ; 114(1): 119-125, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37531627

RESUMEN

Macrophomina phaseolina is a plant pathogenic fungus that is frequently described as having a broad host range encompassing more than 500 species. We noticed that citations provided in support of this statement do not actually demonstrate such a broad host range. To elucidate the true documented host range of this fungus, we initiated a literature meta-analysis of 894 publications on M. phaseolina since 1913. We discovered that the first host range summaries did not require Koch's postulates or other experimental demonstrations of pathogenicity. Most of the available early host claims were based on tenuous associations between the fungus and symptoms, sometimes without reporting isolation or morphological examination in vitro. These statements apparently led to a pattern of increasingly exaggerated host range claims, without support from a primary reference, until the claim that M. phaseolina has 500 hosts became common in the early 2000s. At present, the scientific community typically requires Koch's postulates to characterize pathogenicity on a new host. Among all the available literature, we only found primary experimental evidence for M. phaseolina's pathogenicity on 97 hosts; 74 hosts confirmed by Koch's postulates and 23 hosts with all steps from Koch's postulates completed except for recovery of the pathogen from symptomatic tissues. This study demonstrates how scientific concepts can change over time and necessitate changes to historic axioms. We propose that the hyperbole surrounding the host range of M. phaseolina has obscured an accurate depiction of its biology.


Asunto(s)
Ascomicetos , Enfermedades de las Plantas , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Ascomicetos/genética , Especificidad del Huésped
4.
Plant Dis ; 2023 May 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37134247

RESUMEN

In California, Fusarium wilt of strawberry is widespread and causes significant yield losses. Resistant cultivars with the FW1 gene were protected against Fusarium wilt because all strains of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. fragariae (Fof) in California were race 1 (i.e., avirulent to FW1-resistant cultivars) (Henry et al. 2017; Pincot, et al. 2018; Henry et al. 2021). In the fall of 2022, severe wilt disease was observed in an organic, summer-planted strawberry field in Oxnard, California. Fusarium wilt symptoms were common and included wilted foliage, deformed and highly chlorotic leaflets, and crown discoloration. The field was planted with Portola, a cultivar with the FW1 gene that is resistant to Fof race 1 (Pincot et al. 2018; Henry et al. 2021). Two samples, each consisting of four plants, were collected from two different locations within the field. Crown extracts from each sample were tested for Fof, Macrophomina phaseolina, Verticillium dahliae, and Phytophthora spp. by recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA) (Steele et al. 2022). Petioles were surface sterilized in 1% sodium hypochlorite for 2 minutes and plated on Komada's medium to select for Fusarium spp. (Henry et al. 2021; Komada, 1975). The RPA results were positive for M. phaseolina in one sample and negative for all four pathogens in the other sample. Salmon-colored, fluffy mycelia grew profusely from petioles of both samples. Colony morphology and non-septate, ellipsoidal microconidia (6.0-13 µm × 2.8-4.0 µm) borne on monophialides resembled F. oxysporum. Single hyphal tip isolation of fourteen cultures (P1-P14) was done to purify single genotypes. None of these pure cultures amplified with Fof-specific qPCR (Burkhardt et al. 2019), confirming the negative result obtained with RPA. Translation elongation factor 1-alpha (EF1α) was amplified using EF1/EF2 primers (O'Donnell et al. 1998) from three isolates. Amplicons were sequenced (GenBank OQ183721) and found through BLAST search to have 100% identity with an isolate of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. melongenae (GenBank FJ985297). There was at least one nucleotide difference when compared to all known strains of Fof race 1 (Henry et al. 2021). Five isolates (P2, P3, P6, P12, and P13) and an Fof race 1 control isolate (GL1315) were tested for pathogenicity on Fronteras (FW1) and Monterey (fw1; susceptible to race 1). Five plants per isolate × cultivar combination were inoculated by dipping roots in 5 × 106 conidia per mL of 0.1% water agar, or in sterile 0.1% water agar for the negative control, and grown as described by Jenner and Henry (2022). After six weeks, all non-inoculated control plants remained healthy while plants of both cultivars inoculated with the five isolates were severely wilted. Petiole assays yielded colonies identical in appearance to the inoculated isolates. For Fof race 1-inoculated plants, wilt symptoms were observed in Monterey but not in Fronteras. This experiment was repeated with P2, P3, P12, and P13 on another FW1 cultivar, San Andreas, and the same results were observed. To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. oxysporum f. sp. fragariae race 2 in California. Losses to Fusarium wilt are likely to increase until genetic resistance to this strain of Fof race 2 is deployed in commercially viable cultivars.

5.
Front Plant Sci ; 12: 718264, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34925393

RESUMEN

Plants recruit beneficial microbial communities in the rhizosphere that are involved in a myriad of ecological services, such as improved soil quality, nutrient uptake, abiotic stress tolerance, and soil-borne disease suppression. Disease suppression caused by rhizosphere microbiomes has been important in managing soil-borne diseases in wheat. The low heritability of resistance in wheat to soil-borne diseases like Rhizoctonia root rot has made management of these diseases challenging, particularly in direct-seeded systems. Identification of wheat genotypes that recruit rhizosphere microbiomes that promote improved plant fitness and suppression of the pathogen could be an alternative approach to disease management through genetic improvement. Several growth chamber cycling experiments were conducted using six winter wheat genotypes (PI561725, PI561727, Eltan, Lewjain, Hill81, Madsen) to determine wheat genotypes that recruit suppressive microbiomes. At the end of the third cycle, suppression assays were done by inoculating R. solani into soils previously cultivated with specific wheat genotypes to test suppression of the pathogen by the microbiome. Microbiome composition was characterized by sequencing of 16S rDNA (V1-V3 region). Among the growth cycling lengths, 160-day growth cycles exhibited the most distinct rhizosphere microbiomes among the wheat genotypes. Suppression assays showed that rhizosphere microbiomes of different wheat genotypes resulted in significant differences in shoot length (value of p=0.018) and had an impact on the pathogenicity of R. solani, as observed in the reduced root disease scores (value of p=0.051). Furthermore, soils previously cultivated with the ALMT1 isogenic lines PI561725 and PI561727 exhibited better seedling vigor and reduced root disease. Microbiome analysis showed that Burkholderiales taxa, specifically Janthinobacterium, are differentially abundant in PI561727 and PI561725 cultivated soils and are associated with reduced root disease and better growth. This study demonstrates that specific wheat genotypes recruit different microbiomes in growth chamber conditions but the microbial community alterations were quite different from those previously observed in field plots, even though the same soils were used. Genotype selection or development appears to be a viable approach to controlling soil-borne diseases in a sustainable manner, and controlled environment assays can be used to see genetic differences but further work is needed to explain differences seen between growth chamber and field conditions.

6.
J Vis Exp ; (144)2019 02 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30799863

RESUMEN

Siderophores (low-molecular weight metal chelating compounds) are important in various ecological phenomenon ranging from iron (Fe) biogeochemical cycling in soils, to pathogen competition, plant growth promotion, and cross-kingdom signaling. Furthermore, siderophores are also of commercial interest in bioleaching and bioweathering of metal-bearing minerals and ores. A rapid, cost effective, and robust means of quantitatively assessing siderophore production in complex samples is key to identifying important aspects of the ecological ramifications of siderophore activity, including, novel siderophore producing microbes. The method presented here was developed to assess siderophore activity of in-tact microbiome communities, in environmental samples, such as soil or plant tissues. The samples were homogenized and diluted in a modified M9 medium (without Fe), and enrichment cultures were incubated for 3 days. Siderophore production was assessed in samples at 24, 48, and 72 hours (h) using a novel 96-well microplate CAS (Chrome azurol sulphonate)-Fe agar assay, an adaptation of the traditionally tedious and time-consuming colorimetric method of assessing siderophore activity, performed on individual cultivated microbial isolates. We applied our method to 4 different genotypes/Lines of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), including Lewjain, Madsen, and PI561725, and PI561727 commonly grown in the inland Pacific Northwest. Siderophore production was clearly impacted by the genotype of wheat, and in the specific types of plant tissues observed. We successfully used our method to rapidly screen for the influence of plant genotype on siderophore production, a key function in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. We produced many technical replicates, yielding very reliable statistical differences in soils and within plant tissues. Importantly, the results show the proposed method can be used to rapidly examine siderophore production in complex samples with a high degree of reliability, in a manner that allows communities to be preserved for later work to identify taxa and functional genes.


Asunto(s)
Monitoreo del Ambiente/métodos , Ensayos Analíticos de Alto Rendimiento , Rizosfera , Sideróforos/metabolismo , Microbiología del Suelo , Suelo/química , Triticum/metabolismo , Ecosistema
7.
Rice (N Y) ; 10(1): 8, 2017 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28321828

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: A range of resistance loci against different races of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo), the pathogen causing bacterial blight (BB) disease of rice, have been discovered and characterized. Several have been deployed in modern varieties, however, due to rapid evolution of Xoo, a number have already become ineffective. The continuous "arms race" between Xoo and rice makes it imperative to discover new resistance loci to enable durable deployment of multiple resistance genes in modern breeding lines. Rice diversity panels can be exploited as reservoirs of useful genetic variation for bacterial blight (BB) resistance. This study was conducted to identify loci associated to BB resistance, new genetic donors and useful molecular markers for marker-assisted breeding. RESULTS: A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of BB resistance using a diverse panel of 285 rice accessions was performed to identify loci that are associated with resistance to nine Xoo strains from the Philippines, representative of eight global races. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with differential resistance were identified in the diverse panel and a subset of 198 indica accessions. Strong associations were found for novel SNPs linked with known bacterial blight resistance Xa genes, from which high utility markers for tracking and selection of resistance genes in breeding programs were designed. Furthermore, significant associations of SNPs in chromosomes 6, 9, 11, and 12 did not overlap with known resistance loci and hence might prove to be novel sources of resistance. Detailed analysis revealed haplotypes that correlated with resistance and analysis of putative resistance alleles identified resistant genotypes as potential donors of new resistance genes. CONCLUSIONS: The results of the GWAS validated known genes underlying resistance and identified novel loci that provide useful targets for further investigation. SNP markers and genetic donors identified in this study will help plant breeders in improving and diversifying resistance to BB.

8.
Rice (N Y) ; 6(1): 11, 2013 May 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24280183

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: This article describes the development of Multi-parent Advanced Generation Inter-Cross populations (MAGIC) in rice and discusses potential applications for mapping quantitative trait loci (QTLs) and for rice varietal development. We have developed 4 multi-parent populations: indica MAGIC (8 indica parents); MAGIC plus (8 indica parents with two additional rounds of 8-way F1 inter-crossing); japonica MAGIC (8 japonica parents); and Global MAGIC (16 parents - 8 indica and 8 japonica). The parents used in creating these populations are improved varieties with desirable traits for biotic and abiotic stress tolerance, yield, and grain quality. The purpose is to fine map QTLs for multiple traits and to directly and indirectly use the highly recombined lines in breeding programs. These MAGIC populations provide a useful germplasm resource with diverse allelic combinations to be exploited by the rice community. RESULTS: The indica MAGIC population is the most advanced of the MAGIC populations developed thus far and comprises 1328 lines produced by single seed descent (SSD). At the S4 stage of SSD a subset (200 lines) of this population was genotyped using a genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) approach and was phenotyped for multiple traits, including: blast and bacterial blight resistance, salinity and submergence tolerance, and grain quality. Genome-wide association mapping identified several known major genes and QTLs including Sub1 associated with submergence tolerance and Xa4 and xa5 associated with resistance to bacterial blight. Moreover, the genome-wide association study (GWAS) results also identified potentially novel loci associated with essential traits for rice improvement. CONCLUSION: The MAGIC populations serve a dual purpose: permanent mapping populations for precise QTL mapping and for direct and indirect use in variety development. Unlike a set of naturally diverse germplasm, this population is tailor-made for breeders with a combination of useful traits derived from multiple elite breeding lines. The MAGIC populations also present opportunities for studying the interactions of genome introgressions and chromosomal recombination.

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