Multiple Horizontal Mini-chromosome Transfers Drive Genome Evolution of Clonal Blast Fungus Lineages

Author:

Barragan Ana Cristina1ORCID,Latorre Sergio M2ORCID,Malmgren Angus1ORCID,Harant Adeline1ORCID,Win Joe1ORCID,Sugihara Yu1ORCID,Burbano Hernán A2ORCID,Kamoun Sophien1ORCID,Langner Thorsten1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Sainsbury Laboratory, University of East Anglia, Norwich Research Park , Norwich , UK

2. Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, Centre for Life's Origins and Evolution, University College London , London , UK

Abstract

Abstract Crop disease pandemics are often driven by asexually reproducing clonal lineages of plant pathogens that reproduce asexually. How these clonal pathogens continuously adapt to their hosts despite harboring limited genetic variation, and in absence of sexual recombination remains elusive. Here, we reveal multiple instances of horizontal chromosome transfer within pandemic clonal lineages of the blast fungus Magnaporthe (Syn. Pyricularia) oryzae. We identified a horizontally transferred 1.2Mb accessory mini-chromosome which is remarkably conserved between M. oryzae isolates from both the rice blast fungus lineage and the lineage infecting Indian goosegrass (Eleusine indica), a wild grass that often grows in the proximity of cultivated cereal crops. Furthermore, we show that this mini-chromosome was horizontally acquired by clonal rice blast isolates through at least nine distinct transfer events over the past three centuries. These findings establish horizontal mini-chromosome transfer as a mechanism facilitating genetic exchange among different host-associated blast fungus lineages. We propose that blast fungus populations infecting wild grasses act as genetic reservoirs that drive genome evolution of pandemic clonal lineages that afflict cereal crops.

Funder

Gatsby Charitable Foundation

UK Research and Innovation Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

European Research Council

BLASTOFF

PANDEMIC

Royal Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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