| Literature DB >> 23863894 |
Michael D Martin1, Enrico Cappellini, Jose A Samaniego, M Lisandra Zepeda, Paula F Campos, Andaine Seguin-Orlando, Nathan Wales, Ludovic Orlando, Simon Y W Ho, Fred S Dietrich, Piotr A Mieczkowski, Joseph Heitman, Eske Willerslev, Anders Krogh, Jean B Ristaino, M Thomas P Gilbert.
Abstract
Responsible for the Irish potato famine of 1845-49, the oomycete pathogen Phytophthora infestans caused persistent, devastating outbreaks of potato late blight across Europe in the 19th century. Despite continued interest in the history and spread of the pathogen, the genome of the famine-era strain remains entirely unknown. Here we characterize temporal genomic changes in introduced P. infestans. We shotgun sequence five 19th-century European strains from archival herbarium samples--including the oldest known European specimen, collected in 1845 from the first reported source of introduction. We then compare their genomes to those of extant isolates. We report multiple distinct genotypes in historical Europe and a suite of infection-related genes different from modern strains. At virulence-related loci, several now-ubiquitous genotypes were absent from the historical gene pool. At least one of these genotypes encodes a virulent phenotype in modern strains, which helps explain the 20th century's episodic replacements of European P. infestans lineages.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23863894 PMCID: PMC3759036 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms3172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Maximum-likelihood phylogram of P. infestans genomes from the first historic outbreaks of disease and later outbreaks.
Nodes are labelled with their support values from 100 bootstrap replicates. The scale bar indicates a branch length of 0.2 nucleotide substitutions per site.
Figure 2Visualization of sequencing coverage distribution across all reference RXLR effectors.
Bar heights represent the mean-normalized coverage of 583 reference RXLR effector genes in the resequenced genome of a particular sample. Genes are arranged according to their 5′ to 3′ physical position on the T30-4 reference genome assembly supercontigs. The black section at the top of the inner ring represents the eight RXLRs contained on supercontig 1. RXLRs in supercontigs 2, 3, … 4802 follow in clockwise fashion, each represented by a different shade of grey. Historical samples Pi1845A (green) and Pi1889 (blue) are plotted along the two inner rings. The resequenced reference strain T30-4 (orange) is plotted in the outer ring, while the remaining inner rings represent modern isolates IN2009T1 (US-22; red), BL2009P4 (US-23; purple), RS2009P1 (US-8; yellow) and 06_3928A (13_A2; light purple). Orange bars extending below the axis indicate genes undetected in a particular sample (Supplementary Table S3). The central links connect a gene absent in at least one resequenced genome to all other members of its tribe, with a unique colour for each tribe.
Figure 3Read depth of coverage around a deleted RXLR effector gene.
The top bar represents the T30-4 strain reference genome assembly sequence for supercontig 66. The green portion of the bar represents a ~6-kbp region deleted in the lower four samples. The blue arrow represents the position of RXLR effector PITG_18215, which is absent from samples with the deletion. Data for the historical samples are plotted in red. Coverage of this region in strain T30-4 is reduced to ~50% of the genome-wide mean. In T30-4, this region is likely either hemizygous or a duplication erroneously absent from the genome assembly. In any case, the sharply defined borders and consistent lack of coverage over the entire deleted region (spanning the length of ~85 successive 70-bp reads) in all samples are conclusive evidence that the region is deleted in four of the resequenced samples.
Summary of non-synonymous substitutions in putative avirulence loci.