Genome Analysis of Strains Responsible for a Fire Blight Outbreak in Korea.

Plant Dis

Department of Systems Biology, Division of Life Sciences, and Institute for Life Science and Biotechnology, Yonsei University, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul 03722, Republic of Korea.

Published: April 2021

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is a plant-pathogenic bacterium that causes fire blight disease in Rosaceae plants. Since fire blight is highly contagious and results in serious losses once introduced, it is regulated as a quarantine disease. Recently, for the first time in East Asia, fire blight emerged in Korea with strains of being isolated from lesions of infected trees. Five of those strains were selected and subjected to whole-genome shotgun sequencing. Each strain had two circular replicons, a 3.8-Mb chromosome and a 28-kb plasmid. The genome sequences were compared with those of other strains isolated from different hosts or geographical regions. Genome synteny was analyzed and sequence variations including nucleotide substitutions, inversions, insertions, and deletions were detected. Analysis of the population genomic structure revealed that the five strains form a distinct structural group. Phylogenomic analysis was performed to infer the evolutionary relationships among strains, which indicated that the Korean isolates, all descended from a common ancestor, are closely related to a lineage of North American strains. These results provide useful information for understanding the genomic dynamics of strains including those in Korea, developing genetic markers for surveillance of the pathogen or diagnosis of the disease, and eventually developing measures to eradicate it.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-06-20-1329-REDOI Listing

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