Open Research will be unavailable from 10.15am - 11am on Saturday 14th March 2026 AEDT due to scheduled maintenance.
 

A high-resolution haplotype collection uncovers somatic hybridization, recombination and intercontinental movement in oat crown rust

Authors

Henningsen, Eva C.
Lewis, David
Nazareno, Eric S.
Mangelson, Hayley
Sanchez, Monica
Langford, Kyle
Huang, Yung Fen
Steffenson, Brian J.
Boesen, Brendan
Kianian, Shahryar F.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Access Statement

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

The population structure and evolution of basidiomycetes like rust fungi are influenced by complex reproductive cycles and dikaryotic life stages where two independent nuclear haplotypes are present in the cell. The ability to alternate between asexual (clonal) and sexual reproduction increases the evolutionary capacity in these species. Furthermore, exchange of intact nuclei (somatic hybridization) in rust fungi can allow for rapid generation of genetic variability outside of the sexual cycle. Puccinia coronata f. sp. avenae (Pca), the causal agent of oat crown rust, is a pathogen of global economic importance that is difficult to control due to rapid breakdown of host genetic resistance. The contribution of sexuality, clonality, and migration to virulence evolution varies across Pca populations. As such, the Pca pathosystem is ideal to address the role of mating type, recombination, mutation, and somatic hybridization in host adaptation. We expanded the existing resources for USA and South African populations by generating whole genome sequencing data of Taiwanese and Australian isolates. An atlas of 30 chromosome-level, fully-phased nuclear haplotypes from six USA isolates and nine Australian isolates was created to capture the genomic composition of key Pca lineages. At the haplotype level, we confirmed previous reports of genetic recombination in the USA population and additionally detected either sexual or cryptic recombination between Australian isolates, contrasting previous evaluations that suggested Pca populations in Australia to be purely clonal. We also identified somatic hybridization events in Pca that are not only associated with significant changes in fitness but also imply intercontinental migration of haplotypes, which provides further impetus for molecular monitoring of rust pathogen populations on a global scale.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

PLoS Genetics

Book Title

Entity type

Publication

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

Downloads