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1.
Phytopathology ; 111(5): 842-849, 2021 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33141646

ABSTRACT

Lettuce (Lactuca sativa) is one of the most economically important vegetables in the United States, with approximately 50% of the domestic production concentrated in the Salinas Valley of California. Verticillium wilt, caused by races 1 and 2 of the fungal pathogen Verticillium dahliae, poses a major threat to lettuce production in this area. Although resistance governed by a single dominant gene against race 1 has previously been identified and is currently being incorporated into commercial cultivars, identification of resistance against race 2 has been challenging and no lines with complete resistance have been identified. In this study, we screened germplasm for resistance and investigated the genetics of partial resistance against race 2 using three mapping populations derived from crosses involving L. sativa × L. sativa and L. serriola × L. sativa. The inheritance of resistance in Lactuca species against race 2 is complex but a common quantitative trait locus (QTL) on linkage group 6, designated qVERT6.1 (quantitative Verticillium dahliae resistance on LG 6, first QTL), was detected in multiple populations. Additional race 2 resistance QTLs located in several linkage groups were detected in individual populations and environments. Because resistance in lettuce against race 2 is polygenic with a large genotype by environment interaction, breeding programs to incorporate these resistance genes should be aware of this complexity as they implement strategies to control race 2.


Subject(s)
Verticillium , Ascomycota , Lactuca/genetics , Plant Breeding , Plant Diseases , Verticillium/genetics
2.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 2645, 2019 06 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31201315

ABSTRACT

Lettuce downy mildew caused by Bremia lactucae is the most important disease of lettuce globally. This oomycete is highly variable and rapidly overcomes resistance genes and fungicides. The use of multiple read types results in a high-quality, near-chromosome-scale, consensus assembly. Flow cytometry plus resequencing of 30 field isolates, 37 sexual offspring, and 19 asexual derivatives from single multinucleate sporangia demonstrates a high incidence of heterokaryosis in B. lactucae. Heterokaryosis has phenotypic consequences on fitness that may include an increased sporulation rate and qualitative differences in virulence. Therefore, selection should be considered as acting on a population of nuclei within coenocytic mycelia. This provides evolutionary flexibility to the pathogen enabling rapid adaptation to different repertoires of host resistance genes and other challenges. The advantages of asexual persistence of heterokaryons may have been one of the drivers of selection that resulted in the loss of uninucleate zoospores in multiple downy mildews.


Subject(s)
Cell Nucleus/genetics , Host-Pathogen Interactions/genetics , Lactuca/microbiology , Oomycetes/genetics , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Cell Nucleus/drug effects , Disease Resistance/genetics , Fungicides, Industrial/pharmacology , Genomics , Lactuca/genetics , Oomycetes/cytology , Oomycetes/pathogenicity , Selection, Genetic/drug effects , Transcriptome/drug effects , Transcriptome/genetics , Virulence/genetics
3.
BMC Genomics ; 19(1): 851, 2018 Nov 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30486780

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Spinach downy mildew caused by the oomycete Peronospora effusa is a significant burden on the expanding spinach production industry, especially for organic farms where synthetic fungicides cannot be deployed to control the pathogen. P. effusa is highly variable and 15 new races have been recognized in the past 30 years. RESULTS: We virulence phenotyped, sequenced, and assembled two isolates of P. effusa from the Salinas Valley, California, U.S.A. that were identified as race 13 and 14. These assemblies are high quality in comparison to assemblies of other downy mildews having low total scaffold count (784 & 880), high contig N50s (48 kb & 52 kb), high BUSCO completion and low BUSCO duplication scores and share many syntenic blocks with Phytophthora species. Comparative analysis of four downy mildew and three Phytophthora species revealed parallel absences of genes encoding conserved domains linked to transporters, pathogenesis, and carbohydrate activity in the biotrophic species. Downy mildews surveyed that have lost the ability to produce zoospores have a common loss of flagella/motor and calcium domain encoding genes. Our phylogenomic data support multiple origins of downy mildews from hemibiotrophic progenitors and suggest that common gene losses in these downy mildews may be of genes involved in the necrotrophic stages of Phytophthora spp. CONCLUSIONS: We present a high-quality draft genome of Peronospora effusa that will serve as a reference for Peronospora spp. We identified several Pfam domains as under-represented in the downy mildews consistent with the loss of zoosporegenesis and necrotrophy. Phylogenomics provides further support for a polyphyletic origin of downy mildews.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Genomics , Peronospora/genetics , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Heterozygote , Likelihood Functions , Mitochondria/genetics , Molecular Sequence Annotation , Peronospora/pathogenicity , Phylogeny , Sequence Analysis, RNA , Terminal Repeat Sequences/genetics
4.
G3 (Bethesda) ; 8(5): 1513-1521, 2018 05 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29511025

ABSTRACT

CRISPR/Cas9 is a transformative tool for making targeted genetic alterations. In plants, high mutation efficiencies have been reported in primary transformants. However, many of the mutations analyzed were somatic and therefore not heritable. To provide more insights into the efficiency of creating stable homozygous mutants using CRISPR/Cas9, we targeted LsNCED4 (9-cis-EPOXYCAROTENOID DIOXYGENASE4), a gene conditioning thermoinhibition of seed germination in lettuce. Three constructs, each capable of expressing Cas9 and a single gRNA targeting different sites in LsNCED4, were stably transformed into lettuce (Lactuca sativa) cvs. Salinas and Cobham Green. Analysis of 47 primary transformants (T1) and 368 T2 plants by deep amplicon sequencing revealed that 57% of T1 plants contained events at the target site: 28% of plants had germline mutations in one allele indicative of an early editing event (mono-allelic), 8% of plants had germline mutations in both alleles indicative of two early editing events (bi-allelic), and the remaining 21% of plants had multiple low frequency mutations indicative of late events (chimeric plants). Editing efficiency was similar in both genotypes, while the different gRNAs varied in efficiency. Amplicon sequencing of 20 T1 and more than 100 T2 plants for each of the three gRNAs showed that repair outcomes were not random, but reproducible and characteristic for each gRNA. Knockouts of NCED4 resulted in large increases in the maximum temperature for seed germination, with seeds of both cultivars capable of germinating >70% at 37°. Knockouts of NCED4 provide a whole-plant selectable phenotype that has minimal pleiotropic consequences. Targeting NCED4 in a co-editing strategy could therefore be used to enrich for germline-edited events simply by germinating seeds at high temperature.


Subject(s)
CRISPR-Cas Systems/genetics , Gene Editing , Inheritance Patterns/genetics , Lactuca/genetics , Plant Proteins/genetics , Alleles , Gene Knockout Techniques , Genetic Markers , Germ Cells/metabolism , Germination/genetics , Hot Temperature , Mutation/genetics , Phenotype , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified , RNA, Guide, Kinetoplastida/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Transformation, Genetic
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