Unravelling hybridization in Phytophthora using phylogenomics and genome size estimation

Autor/a

Van Poucke, Kris

Haegeman, Annelies

Goedefroit, Thomas

Focquet, Fran

Leus, Leen

Horta Jung, Marília

Nave, Corina

Redondo, Miguel Ángel

Husson, Claude

Kostov, Kaloyan

Lyubenova, Aneta

Christova, Petya

Chandelier, Anne

Slavov, Slavtcho

De Cock, Arthur

Bonants, Peter

Werres, Sabine

Oliva Palau, Jonàs

Marçais, Benoit

Jung, Thomas

Stenli, Jan

Ruttink, Tom

Heungens, Kurt

Fecha de publicación

2021-10-25T10:02:39Z

2021-10-25T10:02:39Z

2021-07-01



Resumen

The genus Phytophthora comprises many economically and ecologically important plant pathogens. Hybrid species have previously been identified in at least six of the 12 phylogenetic clades. These hybrids can potentially infect a wider host range and display enhanced vigour compared to their progenitors. Phytophthora hybrids therefore pose a serious threat to agriculture as well as to natural ecosystems. Early and correct identification of hybrids is therefore essential for adequate plant protection but this is hampered by the limitations of morphological and traditional molecular methods. Identification of hybrids is also important in evolutionary studies as the positioning of hybrids in a phylogenetic tree can lead to suboptimal topologies. To improve the identification of hybrids we have combined genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) and genome size estimation on a genus-wide collection of 614 Phytophthora isolates. Analyses based on locus- and allele counts and especially on the combination of species- specific loci and genome size estimations allowed us to confirm and characterize 27 previously described hybrid species and discover 16 new hybrid species. Our method was also valuable for species identification at an unprecedented resolution and further allowed correct naming of misidentified isolates. We used both a concatenation- and a coalescent-based phylogenomic method to construct a reliable phylogeny using the GBS data of 140 non-hybrid Phytophthora isolates. Hybrid species were subsequently connected to their progenitors in this phylogenetic tree. In this study we demonstrate the application of two validated techniques (GBS and flow cytometry) for relatively low cost but high resolution identification of hybrids and their phylogenetic relations


This work was supported by the ERA-NET BiodivERsA project “Resipath” (Re sponse of European Forests and Society to Invasive Pathogens) co-financed by national funds: in Belgium through the Belgian Science Policy Office (grant number BR/132/A1/RESIPATH-BE) and in Portugal by the Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation (grant number BIODIVERSA/0002/2012).

Tipo de documento

Artículo
Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Materias y palabras clave

Flow cytometry; GBS; Oomycete; Hybrid; Phylogeny; Polyploidy

Publicado por

International Mycological Association (IMA)

Documentos relacionados

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1186/s43008-021-00068-w

IMA Fungus, 2021, vol. 12, art. 16 (1-24)

Derechos

cc-by, (c) Van Poucke et al., 2021

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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