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A chromosome-scale genome assembly reveals a highly dynamic effector repertoire of wheat powdery mildew.
Type of publication
Peer-reviewed
Publikationsform
Original article (peer-reviewed)
Author
Müller Marion C, Praz Coraline R, Sotiropoulos Alexandros G, Menardo Fabrizio, Kunz Lukas, Schudel Seraina, Oberhänsli Simone, Poretti Manuel, Wehrli Andreas, Bourras Salim, Keller Beat, Wicker Thomas,
Project
A study on the origin of plant-specific genes
Show all
Original article (peer-reviewed)
Journal
The New phytologist
Volume (Issue)
221(4)
Page(s)
2176 - 2189
Title of proceedings
The New phytologist
DOI
10.1111/nph.15529
Abstract
Blumeria graminis f. sp. tritici (B.g. tritici) is the causal agent of the wheat powdery mildew disease. The highly fragmented B.g. tritici genome available so far has prevented a systematic analysis of effector genes that are known to be involved in host adaptation. To study the diversity and evolution of effector genes we produced a chromosome-scale assembly of the B.g. tritici genome. The genome assembly and annotation was achieved by combining long-read sequencing with high-density genetic mapping, bacterial artificial chromosome fingerprinting and transcriptomics. We found that the 166.6 Mb B.g. tritici genome encodes 844 candidate effector genes, over 40% more than previously reported. Candidate effector genes have characteristic local genomic organization such as gene clustering and enrichment for recombination-active regions and certain transposable element families. A large group of 412 candidate effector genes shows high plasticity in terms of copy number variation in a global set of 36 isolates and of transcription levels. Our data suggest that copy number variation and transcriptional flexibility are the main drivers for adaptation in B.g. tritici. The high repeat content may play a role in providing a genomic environment that allows rapid evolution of effector genes with selection as the driving force.
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