Abstract

Ramularia leaf spot has recently emerged as a major threat to barley production world-wide, causing 25% yield loss in many barley growing regions. Here, we provide a new reference genome of the causal agent, the Dothideomycete Ramularia collo-cygni. The assembly of 32 Mb consists of 78 scaffolds. We used RNA-seq to identify 11,622 genes of which 1,303 and 282 are coding for predicted secreted proteins and putative effectors respectively.The pathogen separated from its nearest sequenced relative, Zymoseptoria tritici ∼27 Ma. We calculated the divergence of the two species on protein level and see remarkably high synonymous and nonsynonymous divergence. Unlike in many other plant pathogens, the comparisons of transposable elements and gene distributions, show a very homogeneous genome for R. collo-cygni. We see no evidence for higher selective pressure on putative effectors or other secreted proteins and repetitive sequences are spread evenly across the scaffolds. These findings could be associated to the predominantly endophytic life-style of the pathogen. We hypothesize that R. collo-cygni only recently became pathogenic and that therefore its genome does not yet show the typical pathogen characteristics. Because of its high scaffold length and improved CDS annotations, our new reference sequence provides a valuable resource for the community for future comparative genomics and population genetics studies.

Highlights

  • The filamentous ascomycete fungus Ramularia collo-cygni was first described in 1893 as Ophiocladium hordei (Cavara 1893)

  • Using these data mapped to the genome, the annotation was manually corrected gene by gene, yielding a more reliable set of gene models

  • We found a larger number of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) (>4-fold change) in Barley Straw Agar (BSA)

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Summary

Introduction

The filamentous ascomycete fungus Ramularia collo-cygni was first described in 1893 as Ophiocladium hordei (Cavara 1893) It is the biotic agent of ramularia leaf spot (RLS) (Oxley and Havis 2004), a disease typically occurring late in the growing season on the upper canopy (Salamati and Reitan 2006). Since the mid-1980s it has become the major pathogen in many barley growing regions worldwide and quickly developed resistance to major fungicides (Matusinsky et al 2011; Havis et al 2015; Piotrowska et al 2017).

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