4.6 Article

Cloning of the Cytochrome b Gene From the Tomato Powdery Mildew Fungus Leveillula taurica Reveals High Levels of Allelic Variation and Heteroplasmy for the G143A Mutation

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2019.00663

Keywords

cytochrome b; fungicide resistance; heteroplasmy; mitochondria; mutations; polymorphisms; Q(o)I fungicides; strobilurin

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Funding

  1. California Tomato Research Institute (CTRI) [201501233]

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Leveillula taurica is a major pathogen of tomato and several other crops that can cause substantial yield losses in favorable conditions for the fungus. Quinone outside inhibitor fungicides (Q(o)Is) are routinely used for the control of the pathogen in tomato fields across California, but their recurrent use could lead to the emergence of resistance against these compounds. Here, we partially cloned the cytochrome b gene from L. taurica (Lt cytb) and searched within populations of the fungus collected from tomato fields across California for mutations that confer resistance to Q(o)Is. A total of 21 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were identified within a 704 bp fragment of the Lt cytb gene analyzed, of which five were non-synonymous substitutions. Among the most frequent SNPs encountered within field populations of the pathogen was the G143A substitution that confers high levels of resistance against Q(o)Is in several fungi. The other four amino acid substitutions were novel mutations, whose effect on Q(o)I resistance is currently unknown. Sequencing of the Lt cytb gene from individual single-cell conidia of the fungus further revealed that most SNPs, including the one leading to the G143A substitution, were present in a heteroplasmic state, indicating the coexistence of multiple mitotypes in single cells. Analysis of the field samples showed that the G143A substitution is predominantly heteroplasmic also within field populations of L. taurica in California, suggesting that Q(o)I resistance in this fungus is likely to be quantitative rather than qualitative.

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