| Literature DB >> 26072920 |
Longbiao Guo1, Jie Qiu2, Zujing Han3, Zihong Ye4, Chao Chen3, Chuanjun Liu3, Xiufang Xin5, Chu-Yu Ye2, Ying-Ying Wang2, Hongqing Xie3, Yu Wang2, Jiandong Bao2, She Tang2, Jie Xu1, Yijie Gui2, Fei Fu2, Weidi Wang2, Xingchen Zhang2, Qianhua Zhu3, Xuanmin Guang3, Chongzhi Wang3, Haifeng Cui4, Daguang Cai6, Song Ge7, Gerald A Tuskan8, Xiaohan Yang8, Qian Qian1, Sheng Yang He5, Jun Wang3, Xue-Ping Zhou9, Longjiang Fan2.
Abstract
Despite the importance of host-microbe interactions in natural ecosystems, agriculture and medicine, the impact of long-term (especially decades or longer) microbial colonization on the dynamics of host genomes is not well understood. The vegetable crop 'Jiaobai' with enlarged edible stems was domesticated from wild Zizania latifolia (Oryzeae) approximately 2000 years ago as a result of persistent infection by a fungal endophyte, Ustilago esculenta. Asexual propagation via infected rhizomes is the only means of Jiaobai production, and the Z. latifolia-endophyte complex has been maintained continuously for two centuries. Here, genomic analysis revealed that cultivated Z. latifolia has a significantly smaller repertoire of immune receptors compared with wild Z. latifolia. There are widespread gene losses/mutations and expression changes in the plant-pathogen interaction pathway in Jiaobai. These results show that continuous long-standing endophyte association can have a major effect on the evolution of the structural and transcriptomic components of the host genome.Entities:
Keywords: Jiaobai; Zizania; genome; host-microbe interaction; resistance gene analogs
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26072920 DOI: 10.1111/tpj.12912
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant J ISSN: 0960-7412 Impact factor: 6.417