Abstract

BackgroundHost-pathogen interactions that may lead to a competitive co-evolution of virulence and resistance mechanisms present an attractive system to study molecular evolution because strong, recent (or even current) selective pressure is expected at many genomic loci. However, it is unclear whether these selective forces would act to preserve existing diversity, promote novel diversity, or reduce linked neutral diversity during rapid fixation of advantageous alleles. In plants, the lack of adaptive immunity places a larger burden on genetic diversity to ensure survival of plant populations. This burden is even greater if the generation time of the plant is much longer than the generation time of the pathogen.Methodology/Principal FindingsHere, we present nucleotide polymorphism and substitution data for 41 candidate genes from the long-lived forest tree loblolly pine, selected primarily for their prospective influences on host-pathogen interactions. This dataset is analyzed together with 15 drought-tolerance and 13 wood-quality genes from previous studies. A wide range of neutrality tests were performed and tested against expectations from realistic demographic models.Conclusions/SignificanceCollectively, our analyses found that axr (auxin response factor), caf1 (chromatin assembly factor) and gatabp1 (gata binding protein 1) candidate genes carry patterns consistent with directional selection and erd3 (early response to drought 3) displays patterns suggestive of a selective sweep, both of which are consistent with the arm-race model of disease response evolution. Furthermore, we have identified patterns consistent with diversifying selection at erf1-like (ethylene responsive factor 1), ccoaoemt (caffeoyl-CoA-O-methyltransferase), cyp450-like (cytochrome p450-like) and pr4.3 (pathogen response 4.3), expected under the trench-warfare evolution model. Finally, a drought-tolerance candidate related to the plant cell wall, lp5, displayed patterns consistent with balancing selection. In conclusion, both arms-race and trench-warfare models seem compatible with patterns of polymorphism found in different disease-response candidate genes, indicating a mixed strategy of disease tolerance evolution for loblolly pine, a major tree crop in southeastern United States.

Highlights

  • Host-pathogen interactions have long been recognized to have a major influence over levels of biological diversity and evolutionary trends [1]

  • We have investigated a set of candidate genes for disease response and plant-pathogen interaction in loblolly pine, noting that two prominent theories describing the evolution of genes involved in these interactions imply strong selective forces acting at these loci

  • A collection of genes chosen as candidates based on functional or predicted annotations of homologs in other plant systems may be further screened for evidence of selection that would support their role in the evolution of disease responses

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Summary

Introduction

Host-pathogen interactions have long been recognized to have a major influence over levels of biological diversity and evolutionary trends [1]. Host-pathogen interactions that may lead to a competitive co-evolution of virulence and resistance mechanisms present an attractive system to study molecular evolution because strong, recent (or even current) selective pressure is expected at many genomic loci. It is unclear whether these selective forces would act to preserve existing diversity, promote novel diversity, or reduce linked neutral diversity during rapid fixation of advantageous alleles. The lack of adaptive immunity places a larger burden on genetic diversity to ensure survival of plant populations This burden is even greater if the generation time of the plant is much longer than the generation time of the pathogen

Methods
Results
Conclusion

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