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Population studies of the wild tomato species reveal geographically structured major gene-mediated pathogen resistance. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Natural plant populations, like wild tomatoes, face strong pressure from pathogens, leading to the evolution of resistance genes that vary by location.
  • Different regional populations of wild tomatoes show significant differences in their resistance to a particular ascomycete pathogen affecting domesticated tomatoes, with southern populations demonstrating complete loss of recognition.
  • The study reveals that the complexity of resistance genes is greater than expected, suggesting that localized gene recombination helps maintain genetic diversity in populations under pathogen pressure.

Article Abstract

Natural plant populations encounter strong pathogen pressure and defence-associated genes are known to be under selection dependent on the pressure by the pathogens. Here, we use populations of the wild tomato to investigate natural resistance against , a well-known ascomycete pathogen of domesticated tomatoes. Host populations used are from distinct geographical origins and share a defined evolutionary history. We show that distinct populations of differ in resistance against the pathogen. Screening for major resistance gene-mediated pathogen recognition throughout the whole species showed clear geographical differences between populations and complete loss of pathogen recognition in the south of the species range. In addition, we observed high complexity in a () locus, underlying the recognition of in central and northern populations. Our findings show that major gene-mediated recognition specificity is diverse in a natural plant-pathosystem. We place major gene resistance in a geographical context that also defined the evolutionary history of that species. Data suggest that the underlying loci are more complex than previously anticipated, with small-scale gene recombination being possibly responsible for maintaining balanced polymorphisms in the populations that experience pathogen pressure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7779489PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2020.2723DOI Listing

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