Introduction and adaptation of an emerging pathogen to olive trees in Italy

Author:

Sicard Anne12ORCID,Saponari Maria3,Vanhove Mathieu2,Castillo Andreina I.2ORCID,Giampetruzzi Annalisa4,Loconsole Giuliana3,Saldarelli Pasquale3,Boscia Donato3,Neema Claire1,Almeida Rodrigo P. P.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. PHIM Plant Health Institute, Univ Montpellier, INRAE, Institut Agro, CIRAD, IRD, Montpellier, France

2. UC Berkeley, Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, Berkeley, CA 94720, U.S.A

3. National Research Council (CNR), Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection, Via Amendola 122/D, 70126 Bari, Italy

4. University of Bari Aldo Moro, Department of Soil, Plant and Food Sciences, Piazza Umberto I, 70121 Bari, Italy

Abstract

The invasive plant pathogen Xylella fastidiosa currently threatens European flora through the loss of economically and culturally important host plants. This emerging vector-borne bacterium, native to the Americas, causes several important diseases in a wide range of plants including crops, ornamentals, and trees. Previously absent from Europe, and considered a quarantine pathogen, X. fastidiosa was first detected in Apulia, Italy in 2013 associated with a devastating disease of olive trees (Olive Quick Decline Syndrome, OQDS). OQDS has led to significant economic, environmental, cultural, as well as political crises. Although the biology of X. fastidiosa diseases have been studied for over a century, there is still no information on the determinants of specificity between bacterial genotypes and host plant species, which is particularly relevant today as X. fastidiosa is expanding in the naive European landscape. We analysed the genomes of 79 X . fastidiosa samples from diseased olive trees across the affected area in Italy as well as genomes of the most genetically closely related strains from Central America. We provided insights into the ecological and evolutionary emergence of this pathogen in Italy. We first showed that the outbreak in Apulia is due to a single introduction from Central America that we estimated to have occurred in 2008 [95 % HPD: 1930–2016]. By using a combination of population genomic approaches and evolutionary genomics methods, we further identified a short list of genes that could play a major role in the adaptation of X. fastidiosa to this new environment. We finally provided experimental evidence for the adaptation of the strain to this new environment.

Funder

h2020 marie skłodowska-curie actions

horizon 2020

california department of food and agriculture

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine

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