Abstract

BackgroundHost specialization is a hallmark of numerous plant pathogens including bacteria, fungi, oomycetes and viruses. Yet, the molecular and evolutionary bases of host specificity are poorly understood. In some cases, pathological convergence is observed for individuals belonging to distant phylogenetic clades. This is the case for Xanthomonas strains responsible for common bacterial blight of bean, spread across four genetic lineages. All the strains from these four lineages converged for pathogenicity on common bean, implying possible gene convergences and/or sharing of a common arsenal of genes conferring the ability to infect common bean.ResultsTo search for genes involved in common bean specificity, we used a combination of whole-genome analyses without a priori, including a genome scan based on k-mer search. Analysis of 72 genomes from a collection of Xanthomonas pathovars unveiled 115 genes bearing DNA sequences specific to strains responsible for common bacterial blight, including 20 genes located on a plasmid. Of these 115 genes, 88 were involved in successive events of horizontal gene transfers among the four genetic lineages, and 44 contained nonsynonymous polymorphisms unique to the causal agents of common bacterial blight.ConclusionsOur study revealed that host specificity of common bacterial blight agents is associated with a combination of horizontal transfers of genes, and highlights the role of plasmids in these horizontal transfers.

Highlights

  • Host specialization is a hallmark of numerous plant pathogens including bacteria, fungi, oomycetes and viruses

  • All strains from the four genetic lineages display an allele of the tal23A gene, suggesting that this gene is important for Xanthomonas adaptation to common bean

  • Genome sequencing and phylogeny In order to obtain genomic data representative of the diversity of Xanthomonas strains responsible for Common bacterial blight of bean (CBB), we produced whole genome sequences for 17 strains from the four genetic lineages of X. citri pv. fuscans and X. phaseoli pv. phaseoli that affect beans

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Summary

Introduction

Host specialization is a hallmark of numerous plant pathogens including bacteria, fungi, oomycetes and viruses. Pathological convergence is observed for individuals belonging to distant phylogenetic clades. This is the case for Xanthomonas strains responsible for common bacterial blight of bean, spread across four genetic lineages. Based on repetitive-sequence-based Polymerase Chain Reaction (rep-PCR) fingerprints, X. axonopodis has been subdivided into six subclusters named 9.1 to 9.6 [11] This species complex has been split into the four species X. citri, X. euvesicatoria, X. phaseoli and X. axonopodis [12, 13]. All strains from the four genetic lineages display an allele of the tal23A gene, suggesting that this gene is important for Xanthomonas adaptation to common bean

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