Literature DB >> 15802503

Origins of host-specific populations of the blast pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae in crop domestication with subsequent expansion of pandemic clones on rice and weeds of rice.

Brett C Couch1, Isabelle Fudal, Marc-Henri Lebrun, Didier Tharreau, Barbara Valent, Pham van Kim, Jean-Loup Nottéghem, Linda M Kohn.   

Abstract

Rice, as a widely and intensively cultivated crop, should be a target for parasite host shifts and a source for shifts to co-occurring weeds. Magnaporthe oryzae, of the M. grisea species complex, is the most important fungal pathogen of rice, with a high degree of host specificity. On the basis of 10 loci from six of its seven linkage groups, 37 multilocus haplotypes among 497 isolates of M. oryzae from rice and other grasses were identified. Phylogenetic relationships among isolates from rice (Oryza sativa), millet (Setaria spp.), cutgrass (Leersia hexandra), and torpedo grass (Panicum repens) were predominantly tree like, consistent with a lack of recombination, but from other hosts were reticulate, consistent with recombination. The single origin of rice-infecting M. oryzae followed a host shift from a Setaria millet and was closely followed by additional shifts to weeds of rice, cutgrass, and torpedo grass. Two independent estimators of divergence time indicate that these host shifts predate the Green Revolution and could be associated with rice domestication. The rice-infecting lineage is characterized by high copy number of the transposable element MGR586 (Pot3) and, except in two haplotypes, by a loss of AVR-Co39. Both mating types have been retained in ancestral, well-distributed rice-infecting haplotypes 10 (mainly temperate) and 14 (mainly tropical), but only one mating type was recovered from several derived, geographically restricted haplotypes. There is evidence of a common origin of both ACE1 virulence genotypes in haplotype 14. Host-haplotype association is evidenced by low pathogenicity on hosts associated with other haplotypes.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15802503      PMCID: PMC1450392          DOI: 10.1534/genetics.105.041780

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genetics        ISSN: 0016-6731            Impact factor:   4.562


  56 in total

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7.  Population structure and dynamics of Magnaporthe grisea in the Indian Himalayas.

Authors:  J Kumar; R J Nelson; R S Zeigler
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Authors:  Y Jia; S A McAdams; G T Bryan; H P Hershey; B Valent
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Review 9.  The population genetics of Trypanosoma brucei and the origin of human infectivity.

Authors:  A MacLeod; A Tait; C M Turner
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2001-07-29       Impact factor: 6.237

10.  Gain of virulence caused by insertion of a Pot3 transposon in a Magnaporthe grisea avirulence gene.

Authors:  S Kang; M H Lebrun; L Farrall; B Valent
Journal:  Mol Plant Microbe Interact       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 4.171

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  69 in total

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5.  Transposon-based high sequence diversity in Avr-Pita alleles increases the potential for pathogenicity of Magnaporthe oryzae populations.

Authors:  P K Singh; S Thakur; R Rathour; M Variar; S K Prashanthi; A K Singh; U D Singh; V Sharma; N K Singh; T R Sharma
Journal:  Funct Integr Genomics       Date:  2014-03-15       Impact factor: 3.410

6.  Translocation of Magnaporthe oryzae effectors into rice cells and their subsequent cell-to-cell movement.

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Review 7.  Under pressure: investigating the biology of plant infection by Magnaporthe oryzae.

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10.  Interaction transcriptome analysis identifies Magnaporthe oryzae BAS1-4 as Biotrophy-associated secreted proteins in rice blast disease.

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