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Genome-Wide Increased Copy Number is Associated with Emergence of Dominant Clones of the Irish Potato Famine Pathogen Phytophthora infestans

Brian J. Knaus, Javier F. Tabima, Shankar K. Shakya, Howard S. Judelson, Niklaus J. Grünwald

2020mBio39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, continues to reemerge globally. Understanding changes in the genome during emergence can provide insights useful for managing this pathogen. Previous work has relied on studying individuals from the United States, South America, Europe, and China reporting that these can occur as diploids, triploids, or tetraploids and are clonal. We studied variation in sexual populations at the pathogen's center of origin, in Mexico, where it has been reported to reproduce sexually as well as within clonally reproducing, dominant clones from the United States and Europe. Our results newly show that sexual populations at the center of origin are diploid, whereas populations elsewhere are more variable and show genome-wide variation in gene copy number. We propose a model of evolution whereby new pathogen clones emerge predominantly by increasing the gene copy number genome-wide.

Topics & Concepts

Phytophthora infestansBiologyGenomePathogenGeneticsGeneCopy-number variationPloidyEvolutionary biologyPlant Pathogens and ResistancePlant Disease Resistance and GeneticsGenetic diversity and population structure
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