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Repeated gain and loss of a single gene modulates the evolution of vascular plant pathogen lifestyles

Authors :
Gluck-Thaler, E.
Cerutti, Aude
Pérez-Quintero, Alvaro L.
Butchacas, Jules
Roman-Reyna, Verónica
Madhavan, Vishnu Narayanan
Shantharaj, Deepak
Merfa, Marcus V.
Pesce, Céline
Jauneau, Alain
Vancheva, T.
Lang, Jillian M.
Allen, Caitilyn
Verdier, Valérie
Gagnevin, Lionel
Szurek, Boris
Beckham, Gregg T.
De La Fuente, Leonardo
Patel, Hitendra Kumar
Sonti, Ramesh V.
Bragard, Claude
Leach, Jan E.
Noel, Laurent D.
Slot, J.
Koebnik, Ralf
Jacobs, Jonathan M.
Gluck-Thaler, E.
Cerutti, Aude
Pérez-Quintero, Alvaro L.
Butchacas, Jules
Roman-Reyna, Verónica
Madhavan, Vishnu Narayanan
Shantharaj, Deepak
Merfa, Marcus V.
Pesce, Céline
Jauneau, Alain
Vancheva, T.
Lang, Jillian M.
Allen, Caitilyn
Verdier, Valérie
Gagnevin, Lionel
Szurek, Boris
Beckham, Gregg T.
De La Fuente, Leonardo
Patel, Hitendra Kumar
Sonti, Ramesh V.
Bragard, Claude
Leach, Jan E.
Noel, Laurent D.
Slot, J.
Koebnik, Ralf
Jacobs, Jonathan M.
Source :
Science Advances
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Vascular plant pathogens travel long distances through host veins, leading to life-threatening, systemic infections. In contrast, nonvascular pathogens remain restricted to infection sites, triggering localized symptom development. The contrasting features of vascular and nonvascular diseases suggest distinct etiologies, but the basis for each remains unclear. Here, we show that the hydrolase CbsA acts as a phenotypic switch between vascular and nonvascular plant pathogenesis. cbsA was enriched in genomes of vascular phytopathogenic bacteria in the family Xanthomonadaceae and absent in most nonvascular species. CbsA expression allowed nonvascular Xanthomonas to cause vascular blight, while cbsA mutagenesis resulted in reduction of vascular or enhanced nonvascular symptom development. Phylogenetic hypothesis testing further revealed that cbsA was lost in multiple nonvascular lineages and more recently gained by some vascular subgroups, suggesting that vascular pathogenesis is ancestral. Our results overall demonstrate how the gain and loss of single loci can facilitate the evolution of complex ecological traits. evolution of complex ecological traits.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Science Advances
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391321485
Document Type :
Electronic Resource