Washington State University Puyallup Research and Extension Center, Puyallup, Washington, 98371, USA.
Department of Plant Pathology, University of California, Davis, California, 95616, USA.
BMC Genomics. 2018 May 2;19(1):320. doi: 10.1186/s12864-018-4709-7.
Accumulating evidence suggests that genome plasticity allows filamentous plant pathogens to adapt to changing environments. Recently, the generalist plant pathogen Phytophthora ramorum has been documented to undergo irreversible phenotypic alterations accompanied by chromosomal aberrations when infecting trunks of mature oak trees (genus Quercus). In contrast, genomes and phenotypes of the pathogen derived from the foliage of California bay (Umbellularia californica) are usually stable. We define this phenomenon as host-induced phenotypic diversification (HIPD). P. ramorum also causes a severe foliar blight in some ornamental plants such as Rhododendron spp. and Viburnum spp., and isolates from these hosts occasionally show phenotypes resembling those from oak trunks that carry chromosomal aberrations. The aim of this study was to investigate variations in phenotypes and genomes of P. ramorum isolates from non-oak hosts and substrates to determine whether HIPD changes may be equivalent to those among isolates from oaks.
We analyzed genomes of diverse non-oak isolates including those taken from foliage of Rhododendron and other ornamental plants, as well as from natural host species, soil, and water. Isolates recovered from artificially inoculated oak logs were also examined. We identified diverse chromosomal aberrations including copy neutral loss of heterozygosity (cnLOH) and aneuploidy in isolates from non-oak hosts. Most identified aberrations in non-oak hosts were also common among oak isolates; however, trisomy, a frequent type of chromosomal aberration in oak isolates was not observed in isolates from Rhododendron.
This work cross-examined phenotypic variation and chromosomal aberrations in P. ramorum isolates from oak and non-oak hosts and substrates. The results suggest that HIPD comparable to that occurring in oak hosts occurs in non-oak environments such as in Rhododendron leaves. Rhododendron leaves are more easily available than mature oak stems and thus can potentially serve as a model host for the investigation of HIPD, the newly described plant-pathogen interaction.
越来越多的证据表明,基因组的可塑性使丝状植物病原体能够适应不断变化的环境。最近,已记录到多面手植物病原体松材线虫在感染成熟橡树(栎属)树干时会发生不可逆转的表型改变,并伴有染色体异常。相比之下,源自加利福尼亚湾(Umbellularia californica)叶片的病原体的基因组和表型通常是稳定的。我们将这种现象定义为宿主诱导的表型多样化(HIPD)。松材线虫还会引起一些观赏植物如杜鹃属和荚蒾属的严重叶斑病,而这些宿主的分离物偶尔会表现出类似于带有染色体异常的橡树树干的表型。本研究旨在研究非橡树宿主和基质中松材线虫分离物的表型和基因组变化,以确定 HIPD 变化是否与橡树分离物中的变化相当。
我们分析了来自不同非橡树宿主的分离物的基因组,包括从杜鹃和其他观赏植物的叶片以及天然宿主物种、土壤和水中分离的分离物。还检查了从人工接种的橡树原木中回收的分离物。我们鉴定了来自非橡树宿主的分离物中的多种染色体异常,包括无着丝粒丢失和非整倍性。在非橡树宿主中鉴定出的大多数异常也存在于橡树分离物中;然而,在杜鹃分离物中未观察到橡树分离物中常见的三体性,这是一种常见的染色体异常类型。
这项工作交叉检查了来自橡树和非橡树宿主和基质的松材线虫分离物的表型变异和染色体异常。结果表明,与橡树宿主中发生的 HIPD 相当的现象发生在非橡树环境中,如杜鹃叶片中。杜鹃叶片比成熟的橡树茎更容易获得,因此可以作为 HIPD 的模型宿主,用于研究这种新描述的植物-病原体相互作用。