コーヒー萎凋病、作物を狙う新たな遺伝子兵器を進化させる(Coffee wilt disease evolves new genetic weapons to target crops)

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2024-12-06 インペリアル・カレッジ・ロンドン(ICL)

インペリアル・カレッジ・ロンドンの研究者らは、コーヒー萎凋病(CWD)の病原菌であるFusarium xylarioidesが、他の菌類から遺伝子を取得することで、アラビカ種やロブスタ種のコーヒー植物への感染能力を高めたことを明らかにしました。この遺伝子の水平伝播は、土壌中でFusarium oxysporumなどの菌類から感染関連遺伝子を取得し、植物の細胞壁を効果的に分解する能力を向上させたとされています。この発見は、CWDの再発生の遺伝的起源を解明し、将来的な感染拡大を防ぐための農業戦略の策定に寄与する可能性があります。

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コーヒー萎凋病の連続発生にフザリウム菌種間の水平移動が関与か Horizontal transfers between fungal Fusarium species contributed to successive outbreaks of coffee wilt disease

Lily D. Peck ,Theo Llewellyn,Bastien Bennetot,Samuel O’Donnell,Reuben W. Nowell,Matthew J. Ryan,Julie Flood,Ricardo C. Rodríguez de la Vega,Jeanne Ropars,Tatiana Giraud,Pietro D. Spanu,Timothy G. Barraclough

PLOS Biology  Published: December 5, 2024

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3002480

コーヒー萎凋病、作物を狙う新たな遺伝子兵器を進化させる(Coffee wilt disease evolves new genetic weapons to target crops)

Abstract

Outbreaks of fungal diseases have devastated plants and animals throughout history. Over the past century, the repeated emergence of coffee wilt disease caused by the fungal pathogen Fusarium xylarioides severely impacted coffee production across sub-Saharan Africa. To improve the disease management of such pathogens, it is crucial to understand their genetic structure and evolutionary potential. We compared the genomes of 13 historic strains spanning 6 decades and multiple disease outbreaks to investigate population structure and host specialisation. We found that F. xylarioides comprised at least 4 distinct lineages: 1 host-specific to Coffea arabica, 1 to C. canephora var. robusta, and 2 historic lineages isolated from various Coffea species. The presence/absence of large genomic regions across populations, the higher genetic similarities of these regions between species than expected based on genome-wide divergence and their locations in different loci in genomes across populations showed that horizontal transfers of effector genes from members of the F. oxysporum species complex contributed to host specificity. Multiple transfers into F. xylarioides populations matched different parts of the F. oxysporum mobile pathogenicity chromosome and were enriched in effector genes and transposons. Effector genes in this region and other carbohydrate-active enzymes important in the breakdown of plant cell walls were shown by transcriptomics to be highly expressed during infection of C. arabica by the fungal arabica strains. Widespread sharing of specific transposons between F. xylarioides and F. oxysporum, and the correspondence of a putative horizontally transferred regions to a Starship (large mobile element involved in horizontal gene transfers in fungi), reinforce the inference of horizontal transfers and suggest that mobile elements were involved. Our results support the hypothesis that horizontal gene transfers contributed to the repeated emergence of coffee wilt disease.

1202農芸化学
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