4.7 Article

The identification of a transposon affecting the asexual reproduction of the wheat pathogen Zymoseptoria tritici

Journal

MOLECULAR PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 7, Pages 800-816

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mpp.13064

Keywords

effector; quantitative virulence; transcriptomics; transposon; wheat; Zymoseptoria tritici

Categories

Funding

  1. National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy of the Australian Government
  2. Australian National University-China Scholarship Council joint scholarship
  3. Australian National University, Grains and Research Development Corporation
  4. NSW Department of Primary Industries [DAN00203]

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This study identified a gene within a Class II transposon that affects the virulence of Zymoseptoria tritici, adding complexity to the genetic mechanisms of infection by this important pathogen.
Zymoseptoria tritici, the causal agent of Septoria tritici blotch, is a fungal wheat pathogen that causes significant global yield losses. Within Z. tritici populations, quantitative differences in virulence among different isolates are commonly observed; however, the genetic components that underpin these differences remain elusive. In this study, intraspecific comparative transcriptomic analysis was used to identify candidate genes that contribute to differences in virulence on the wheat cultivar WW2449. This led to the identification of a multicopy gene that was not expressed in the high-virulence isolate when compared to the medium- and low-virulence isolates. Further investigation suggested this gene resides in a 7.9-kb transposon. Subsequent long-read sequencing of the isolates used in the transcriptomic analysis confirmed that this gene did reside in an active Class II transposon, which is composed of four genes named REP9-1 to -4. Silencing and overexpression of REP9-1 in two distinct genetic backgrounds demonstrated that its expression alone reduces the number of pycnidia produced by Z. tritici during infection. The REP9-1 gene identified within a Class II transposon is the first discovery of a gene in a transposable element that influences the virulence of Z. tritici. This discovery adds further complexity to genetic loci that contribute to quantitative virulence in this important pathogen.

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