Polygenic pathogen networks influence transcriptional plasticity in the Arabidopsis–Botrytis pathosystem

Author:

Krishnan Parvathy1,Caseys Celine2,Soltis Nik2,Zhang Wei3,Burow Meike1,Kliebenstein Daniel J12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. DynaMo Center of Excellence, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen DL-1165 Denmark

2. Department of Plant Sciences, University of California Davis , Davis, CA 95616 USA

3. Department of Botany & Plant Sciences, Institute for Integrative Genome Biology, University of California Riverside , Riverside, CA 92521 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Bidirectional flow of information shapes the outcome of the host–pathogen interactions and depends on the genetics of each organism. Recent work has begun to use co-transcriptomic studies to shed light on this bidirectional flow, but it is unclear how plastic the co-transcriptome is in response to genetic variation in both the host and pathogen. To study co-transcriptome plasticity, we conducted transcriptomics using natural genetic variation in the pathogen, Botrytis cinerea, and large-effect genetic variation abolishing defense signaling pathways within the host, Arabidopsis thaliana. We show that genetic variation in the pathogen has a greater influence on the co-transcriptome than mutations that abolish defense signaling pathways in the host. Genome-wide association mapping using the pathogens’ genetic variation and both organisms’ transcriptomes allowed an assessment of how the pathogen modulates plasticity in response to the host. This showed that the differences in both organism's responses were linked to trans-expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) hotspots within the pathogen's genome. These hotspots control gene sets in either the host or pathogen and show differential allele sensitivity to the host’s genetic variation rather than qualitative host specificity. Interestingly, nearly all the trans-eQTL hotspots were unique to the host or pathogen transcriptomes. In this system of differential plasticity, the pathogen mediates the shift in the co-transcriptome more than the host.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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