Diversification, loss, and virulence gains of the major effector AvrStb6 during continental spread of the wheat pathogen<i>Zymoseptoria tritici</i>
Author(s)
Sampaio Ana Margarida
Moser Tralamazza Sabina
Mohamadi, Faharidine
De Oliveira, Yannick
Enjalbert, Jérôme
Saintenac, Cyrille
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Date issued
October 15, 2024
From page
1
To page
27
Number of pages
27 p.
Abstract
Interactions between plant pathogens and their hosts are highly dynamic and mainly driven by pathogen effectors and plant receptors. Host-pathogen co-evolution can cause rapid diversification or loss of pathogen genes encoding host-exposed proteins. The molecular mechanisms that underpin such sequence dynamics remains poorly investigated at the scale of entire pathogen species. Here, we focus on AvrStb6, a major effector of the global wheat pathogen Zymoseptoria tritici, evolving in response to the cognate receptor Stb6, a resistance widely deployed in wheat. We comprehensively captured effector gene evolution by analyzing a global thousand-genome panel using reference-free sequence analyses. We found that AvrStb6 has diversified into 59 protein isoforms with a strong association to the pathogen spreading to new continents. Across Europe, we found the strongest differentiation of the effector consistent with high rates of Stb6 deployment. The AvrStb6 locus showed also a remarkable diversification in transposable element content with specific expansion patterns across the globe. We detected AvrStb6 gene losses and evidence for transposable element-mediated disruptions. We used virulence datasets of genome-wide association mapping studies to predict virulence changes across the global panel. Genomic predictions suggested marked increases in virulence on Stb6 cultivars concomitant with the spread of the pathogen to Europe and the subsequent spread to further continents. Finally, we genotyped French bread wheat cultivars for Stb6 and monitored resistant cultivar deployment concomitant with AvrStb6 evolution. Taken together, our data provides a comprehensive view of how a rapidly diversifying effector locus can undergo large-scale sequence changes concomitant with gains in virulence on resistant cultivars. The analyses highlight also the need for large-scale pathogen sequencing panels to assess the durability of resistance genes and improve the sustainability of deployment strategies.
Publication type
preprint
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