Literature DB >> 33100147

Tracing the Origin and Evolutionary History of Pyricularia oryzae Infecting Maize and Barnyard Grass.

Adel Pordel1, Sebastien Ravel2,3,4, Florian Charriat2, Pierre Gladieux2, Sandrine Cros-Arteil2, Joelle Milazzo2,4, Henri Adreit2,4, Mohammad Javan-Nikkhah5, Amir Mirzadi-Gohari5, Ali Moumeni6, Didier Tharreau2,4.   

Abstract

Blast disease is a notorious fungal disease leading to dramatic yield losses on major food crops such as rice and wheat. The causal agent, Pyricularia oryzae, encompasses different lineages, each having a different host range. Host shifts are suspected to have occurred in this species from Setaria spp. to rice and from Lolium spp. to wheat. The emergence of blast disease on maize in Iran was observed for the first time in the north of the country in 2012. We later identified blast disease in two additional regions of Iran: Gilan in 2013 and Golestan in 2016. Epidemics on the weed barnyard grass (Echinochloa spp.) were also observed in the same maize fields. Here, we showed that P. oryzae is the causal agent of this disease on both hosts. Pathogenicity assays in the greenhouse revealed that strains from maize can infect barnyard grass and conversely. However, genotyping with simple sequence repeat markers and comparative genomics showed that strains causing field epidemics on maize and on barnyard grass are different, although they belong to the same previously undescribed clade of P. oryzae. Phylogenetic analyses including these strains and a maize strain collected in Gabon in 1985 revealed two independent host-range expansion events from barnyard grass to maize. Comparative genomics between maize and barnyard grass strains revealed the presence or absence of five candidate genes associated with host specificity on maize, with the deletion of a small genomic region possibly responsible for adaptation to maize. This recent emergence of P. oryzae on maize provides a case study to understand host range expansion. Epidemics on maize raise concerns about potential yield losses on this crop in Iran and potential geographic expansion of the disease.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Magnaporthe oryzae; blast; emergence; evolution; genomics; host range; maize; new disease; pathogen detection

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33100147     DOI: 10.1094/PHYTO-09-20-0423-R

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phytopathology        ISSN: 0031-949X            Impact factor:   4.025


  1 in total

1.  Maintenance of divergent lineages of the Rice Blast Fungus Pyricularia oryzae through niche separation, loss of sex and post-mating genetic incompatibilities.

Authors:  Maud Thierry; Florian Charriat; Joëlle Milazzo; Henri Adreit; Sébastien Ravel; Sandrine Cros-Arteil; Sonia Borron; Violaine Sella; Thomas Kroj; Renaud Ioos; Elisabeth Fournier; Didier Tharreau; Pierre Gladieux
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2022-07-25       Impact factor: 7.464

  1 in total

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