Abstract
ABSTRACTGenotyping by sequencing (GBS) is considered a powerful tool to discover single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), which are useful to characterize closely related genomes of plant species and plant pathogens. We applied GBS to determine genome-wide variations in a panel of 187 isolates of three closely relatedAlternariaspp. that cause diseases on tomato and potato in North Carolina (NC) and Wisconsin (WI). To compare genetic variations, reads were mapped to bothA. alternataandA. solanidraft reference genomes and detected dramatic differences in SNPs among them. Comparison ofA. linariaeandA. solanipopulations by principal component analysis revealed the first (83.8% of variation) and second (8.0% of variation) components containedA. linariaefrom tomato in NC andA. solanifrom potato in WI, respectively, providing evidence of population structure. Genetic differentiation (Hedrick’s G’ST) inA. linariaepopulations from Haywood, Macon, and Madison counties in NC were little or no differentiated (G’ST0.0 - 0.2). However,A. linariaepopulation from Swain county appeared to be highly differentiated (G’ST> 0.8). To measure the strength of the linkage disequilibrium (LD), we also calculated the allelic association between pairs of loci. Lewontin’sD(measures the fraction of allelic variations) and physical distances provided evidence of linkage throughout the entire genome, consistent with the hypothesis of non-random association of alleles among loci. Our findings provide new insights into the understanding of clonal populations on a genome-wide scale and microevolutionary factors that might play an important role in population structure. Although we found limited genetic diversity, the threeAlternariaspp. studied here are genetically distinct and each species is preferentially associated with one host.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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