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Functional Genomics and Comparative Lineage-Specific Region Analyses Reveal Novel Insights into Race Divergence in Verticillium dahliae

Authors :
Dan Wang
Dan-Dan Zhang
Toshiyuki Usami
Lei Liu
Lin Yang
Jin-Qun Huang
Jian Song
Ran Li
Zhi-Qiang Kong
Jun-Jiao Li
Jun Wang
Steven J. Klosterman
Krishna V. Subbarao
Xiao-Feng Dai
Jie-Yin Chen
Source :
Microbiology Spectrum, Vol 9, Iss 3 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2021.

Abstract

ABSTRACT Verticillium dahliae is a widespread soilborne fungus that causes Verticillium wilt on numerous economically important plant species. In tomato, until now, three races have been characterized based on the response of differential cultivars to V. dahliae, but the genetic basis of race divergence in V. dahliae remains undetermined. To investigate the genetic basis of race divergence, we sequenced the genomes of two race 2 strains and four race 3 strains for comparative analyses with two known race 1 genomes. The genetic basis of race divergence was described by the pathogenicity-related genes among the three races, orthologue analyses, and genomic structural variations. Global comparative genomics showed that chromosomal rearrangements are not the only source of race divergence and that race 3 should be split into two genotypes based on orthologue clustering. Lineage-specific regions (LSRs), frequently observed between genomes of the three races, encode several predicted secreted proteins that potentially function as suppressors of immunity triggered by known effectors. These likely contribute to the virulence of the three races. Two genes in particular that can act as markers for race 2 and race 3 (VdR2e and VdR3e, respectively) contribute to virulence on tomato, and the latter acts as an avirulence factor of race 3. We elucidated the genetic basis of race divergence through global comparative genomics and identified secreted proteins in LSRs that could potentially play critical roles in the differential virulence among the races in V. dahliae. IMPORTANCE Deciphering the gene-for-gene relationships during host-pathogen interactions is the basis of modern plant resistance breeding. In the Verticillium dahliae-tomato pathosystem, two races (races 1 and 2) and their corresponding avirulence (Avr) genes have been identified, but strains that lack these two Avr genes exist in nature. In this system, race 3 has been described, but the corresponding Avr gene has not been identified. We de novo-sequenced genomes of six strains and identified secreted proteins within the lineage-specific regions (LSRs) distributed among the genomes of the three races that could potentially function as manipulators of host immunity. One of the LSR genes, VdR3e, was confirmed as the Avr gene for race 3. The results indicate that differences in transcriptional regulation may contribute to race differentiation. This is the first study to describe these differences and elucidate roles of secreted proteins in LSRs that play roles in race differentiation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21650497
Volume :
9
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Microbiology Spectrum
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.fdb692048f064699a0225c0dcec198b4
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/Spectrum.01118-21