Pathogen detection and microbiome analysis of infected wheat using a portable DNA sequencer
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Hu, Yiheng
Green, Gamran
Milgate, Andrew
Stone, Eric
Rathjen, John
Schwessinger, Benjamin
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American Phytopathological Society
Abstract
Fungal diseases of plants are responsible for major losses in agriculture, highlighting the need for rapid and accurate identification of plant pathogens. Disease outcomes are often defined not only by the main pathogen but are influenced by diverse microbial communities known as the microbiome at sites of
infection. Here we present the first use of whole genome shot-gun sequencing with a portable DNA sequencing device as a method for the detection of fungal pathogens from wheat (Triticum aestivum) in a standard molecular biology laboratory. The data revealed that our method is robust and applicable to the diagnosis of fungal diseases including wheat stripe rust (caused by Puccinia
striiformis f. sp. tritici), Septoria tritici blotch (caused by
Zymoseptoria tritici), and yellow leaf spot (caused by Pyrenophora
tritici repentis). We also identified the bacterial genus
Pseudomonas co-present with Puccinia and Zymoseptoria but not
Pyrenophora infections. One limitation of the method is the overrepresentation
of redundant wheat genome sequences from
samples. This could be addressed by long-range amplicon-based
sequencing approaches in future studies, which specifically target
nonhost organisms. Our work outlines a new approach for
detection of a broad range of plant pathogens and associated
microbes using a portable sequencer in a standard laboratory,
providing the basis for future development of an on-site disease
monitoring system.
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Phytobiomes Journal
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Open Access
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CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license
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