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Genome of Pythium myriotylum Uncovers an Extensive Arsenal of Virulence-Related Genes among the Broad-Host-Range Necrotrophic Pythium Plant Pathogens

Authors :
Daly, Paul
Zhou, Dongmei
Shen, Danyu
Chen, Yifan
Xue, Taiqiang
Chen, Siqiao
Zhang, Qimeng
Zhang, Jinfeng
McGowan, Jamie
Cai, Feng
Pang, Guan
Wang, Nan
Sheikh, Taha Majid Mahmood
Deng, Sheng
Li, Jingjing
Soykam, Hüseyin Okan
Kara, Irem
Fitzpatrick, David A.
Druzhinina, Irina S.
Bayram Akcapinar, Günseli
Wei, Lihui
Burbank, Lindsey Price
Matson, Michael
Daly, Paul
Zhou, Dongmei
Shen, Danyu
Chen, Yifan
Xue, Taiqiang
Chen, Siqiao
Zhang, Qimeng
Zhang, Jinfeng
McGowan, Jamie
Cai, Feng
Pang, Guan
Wang, Nan
Sheikh, Taha Majid Mahmood
Deng, Sheng
Li, Jingjing
Soykam, Hüseyin Okan
Kara, Irem
Fitzpatrick, David A.
Druzhinina, Irina S.
Bayram Akcapinar, Günseli
Wei, Lihui
Burbank, Lindsey Price
Matson, Michael
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The Pythium (Peronosporales, Oomycota) genus includes devastating plant pathogens that cause widespread diseases and severe crop losses. Here, we have uncovered a far greater arsenal of virulence factor-related genes in the necrotrophic Pythium myriotylum than in other Pythium plant pathogens. The genome of a plant-virulent P. myriotylum strain (~70 Mb and 19,878 genes) isolated from a diseased rhizome of ginger (Zingiber officinale) encodes the largest repertoire of putative effectors, proteases, and plant cell wall-degrading enzymes (PCWDEs) among the studied species. P. myriotylum has twice as many predicted secreted proteins than any other Pythium plant pathogen. Arrays of tandem duplications appear to be a key factor of the enrichment of the virulence factor-related genes in P. myriotylum. The transcriptomic analysis performed on two P. myriotylum isolates infecting ginger leaves showed that proteases were a major part of the upregulated genes along with PCWDEs, Nep1-like proteins (NLPs), and elicitin-like proteins. A subset of P. myriotylum NLPs were analyzed and found to have necrosis-inducing ability from agroinfiltration of tobacco (Nicotiana benthamiana) leaves. One of the heterologously produced infection-upregulated putative cutinases found in a tandem array showed esterase activity with preferences for longer-chain-length substrates and neutral to alkaline pH levels. Our results allow the development of science-based targets for the management of P. myriotylum-caused disease, as insights from the genome and transcriptome show that gene expansion of virulence factor-related genes play a bigger role in the plant parasitism of Pythium spp. than previously thought. IMPORTANCE Pythium species are oomycetes, an evolutionarily distinct group of filamentous fungus-like stramenopiles. The Pythium genus includes several pathogens of important crop species, e.g., the spice ginger. Analysis of our genome from the plant pathogen Pythium myriotylum uncovered a far la

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, Daly, Paul and Zhou, Dongmei and Shen, Danyu and Chen, Yifan and Xue, Taiqiang and Chen, Siqiao and Zhang, Qimeng and Zhang, Jinfeng and McGowan, Jamie and Cai, Feng and Pang, Guan and Wang, Nan and Sheikh, Taha Majid Mahmood and Deng, Sheng and Li, Jingjing and Soykam, Hüseyin Okan and Kara, Irem and Fitzpatrick, David A. and Druzhinina, Irina S. and Bayram Akcapinar, Günseli and Wei, Lihui and Burbank, Lindsey Price and Matson, Michael (2022) Genome of Pythium myriotylum Uncovers an Extensive Arsenal of Virulence-Related Genes among the Broad-Host-Range Necrotrophic Pythium Plant Pathogens. Microbiology Spectrum, 10 (4). ISSN 2165-0497, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1374545954
Document Type :
Electronic Resource