| Literature DB >> 33780109 |
Pamela Gan1, Ryoko Hiroyama1, Ayako Tsushima1,2, Sachiko Masuda1, Arisa Shibata1, Akiko Ueno1, Naoyoshi Kumakura1, Mari Narusaka3, Trinh Xuan Hoat4, Yoshihiro Narusaka3, Yoshitaka Takano5, Ken Shirasu1,2.
Abstract
Members of the Colletotrichum gloeosporioides species complex are causal agents of anthracnose in many commercially important plants. Closely related strains have different levels of pathogenicity on hosts despite their close phylogenetic relationship. To gain insight into the genetics underlying these differences, we generated and annotated whole-genome assemblies of multiple isolates of C. fructicola (Cf) and C. siamense (Cs), as well as three previously unsequenced species, C. aenigma (Ca), C. tropicale and C. viniferum with different pathogenicity on strawberry. Based on comparative genomics, we identified accessory regions with a high degree of conservation in strawberry-pathogenic Cf, Cs and Ca strains. These regions encode homologs of pathogenicity-related genes known as effectors, organized in syntenic gene clusters, with copy number variations in different strains of Cf, Cs and Ca. Analysis of highly contiguous assemblies of Cf, Cs and Ca revealed the association of related accessory effector gene clusters with telomeres and repeat-rich chromosomes and provided evidence of exchange between these two genomic compartments. In addition, expression analysis indicated that orthologues in syntenic gene clusters showed a tendency for correlated gene expression during infection. These data provide insight into mechanisms by which Colletotrichum genomes evolve, acquire and organize effectors.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33780109 DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.15490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Microbiol ISSN: 1462-2912 Impact factor: 5.491