Abstract

Plant pathogens cause severe losses to crop plants and threaten global food production. One striking example is the wheat stem rust fungus, Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici, which can rapidly evolve new virulent pathotypes in response to resistant host lines. Like several other filamentous fungal and oomycete plant pathogens, its genome features expanded gene families that have been implicated in host-pathogen interactions, possibly encoding effector proteins that interact directly with target host defense proteins. Previous efforts to understand virulence largely relied on the prediction of secreted, small and cysteine-rich proteins as candidate effectors and thus delivered an overwhelming number of candidates. Here, we implement an alternative analysis strategy that uses the signal of adaptive evolution as a line of evidence for effector function, combined with comparative information and expression data. We demonstrate that in planta up-regulated genes that are rapidly evolving are found almost exclusively in pathogen-associated gene families, affirming the impact of host-pathogen co-evolution on genome structure and the adaptive diversification of specialized gene families. In particular, we predict 42 effector candidates that are conserved only across pathogens, induced during infection and rapidly evolving. One of our top candidates has recently been shown to induce genotype-specific hypersensitive cell death in wheat. This shows that comparative genomics incorporating the evolutionary signal of adaptation is powerful for predicting effector candidates for laboratory verification. Our system can be applied to a wide range of pathogens and will give insight into host-pathogen dynamics, ultimately leading to progress in strategies for disease control.

Highlights

  • The basidiomycete Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici is the causal agent of wheat and barley stem rust

  • A PIPELINE FOR PREDICTING EFFECTOR CANDIDATES IN EXPANDED PATHOGEN GENOMES USING MULTIPLE LINES OF EVIDENCE The wheat stem rust Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici has shown the ability to rapidly overcome previously resistant wheat cultivars and, like many other filamentous plant pathogens, features a large genome with expanded gene families that have been linked to host-pathogen interactions (Duplessis et al, 2011; Raffaele and Kamoun, 2012)

  • Proteins that were up-regulated in planta and were observed as part of pathogen-associated gene families predicted to undergo diversifying selection were selected as strong effector candidates for P. graminis f. sp. tritici

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Summary

Introduction

The basidiomycete Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici is the causal agent of wheat and barley stem rust. Filamentous plant pathogens use molecules called effectors that modify host defense-related signaling, cell structure, metabolism and function to effect successful infection (Koeck et al, 2011; Giraldo and Valent, 2013). Plants defend themselves against pathogen attacks by using surface and intracellular recognition mechanisms, part of which directly recognize effectors and trigger resistance reactions (Dodds and Rathjen, 2010). Over time these interactions lead to an evolutionary arms race between host and pathogen (Anderson et al, 2010). Effectors are expected to be amongst the most rapidly evolving genes in pathogen genomes in a recurring strategy to circumvent plant resistance

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