Background: Laurel wilt caused by Raffaelea lauricola is a lethal vascular disease of North American members of the Lauraceae plant family. This fungus and its primary ambrosia beetle vector Xyleborus glabratus originated from Asia; however, there is no report of laurel wilt causing widespread mortality on native Lauraceae trees in Asia. To gain insight into why R. lauricola is a tree-killing plant pathogen in North America, we generated and compared high quality draft genome assemblies of R. lauricola and its closely related non-pathogenic species R. aguacate.
Results: Relative to R. aguacate, the R. lauricola genome uniquely encodes several small-secreted proteins that are associated with virulence in other pathogens and is enriched in secondary metabolite biosynthetic clusters, particularly polyketide synthase (PKS), non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) and PKS-NRPS anchored gene clusters. The two species also exhibit significant differences in secreted proteins including CAZymes that are associated with polysaccharide binding including the chitin binding CBM50 (LysM) domain. Transcriptomic comparisons of inoculated redbay trees and in vitro-grown fungal cultures further revealed a number of secreted protein genes, secondary metabolite clusters and alternative sulfur uptake and assimilation pathways that are coordinately up-regulated during infection.
Conclusions: Through these comparative analyses we have identified potential adaptations of R. lauricola that may enable it to colonize and cause disease on susceptible hosts. How these adaptations have interacted with co-evolved hosts in Asia, where little to no disease occurs, and non-co-evolved hosts in North America, where lethal wilt occurs, requires additional functional analysis of genes and pathways.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-020-06988-y | DOI Listing |
Phytopathology
August 2024
Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, U.K.
This scientometric study reviews the scientific literature and CABI distribution records published in 2022 to find evidence of major disease outbreaks and first reports of pathogens in new locations or on new hosts. This is the second time we have done this, and this study builds on our work documenting and analyzing reports from 2021. Pathogens with three or more articles identified in 2022 literature were , , species complexes, ' Liberibacter asiaticus', , formae specialis, and f.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
March 2023
Tropical Research and Education Center, University of Florida, Homestead, FL, United States.
Introduction: Ambrosia beetles maintain strict associations with specific lineages of fungi. However, anthropogenic introductions of ambrosia beetles into new ecosystems can result in the lateral transfer of their symbionts to other ambrosia beetles. The ability of a Florida endemic ambrosia beetle, , to feed and establish persistent associations with two of its known symbionts ( and ) and two other fungi ( and sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
November 2022
University of Kentucky, Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, Lexington, Kentucky, United States.
Laurel wilt (LW) is a vascular disease caused by the fungus (previously ) and transmitted by its primary vector, the redbay ambrosia beetle (, RAB), both of which were first detected in the United States (US) in 2002, likely introduced from their native range in Asia (Fraedrich et al. 2008; Harrington et al. 2008).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fungi (Basel)
June 2022
Institute of Systematic Botany, The New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY 10458, USA.
Symbiosis between beetles and fungi arose multiple times during the evolution of both organisms. Some of the most biologically diverse and economically important are mutualisms in which the beetles cultivate and feed on fungi. Among these are bark beetles and , a fungal genus that produces -like asexual morph and hosts the causal agent of laurel wilt, (formerly ).
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