The genome of the yellow potato cyst nematode, Globodera rostochiensis, reveals insights into the basis of parasitism and virulence
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Authors
Eves-van den Akker, Sebastian
Laetsch, Dominik R
Thorpe, Peter
Lilley, Catherine J
Danchin, Etienne GJ
Da Rocha, Martine
Rancurel, Corinne
Holroyd, Nancy E
Cotton, James A
Szitenberg, Amir
Grenier, Eric
Montarry, Josselin
Mimee, Benjamin
Duceppe, Marc-Olivier
Boyes, Ian
Marvin, Jessica MC
Jones, Laura M
Yusup, Hazijah B
Lafond-Lapalme, Joël
Esquibet, Magali
Sabeh, Michael
Rott, Michael
Overmars, Hein
Finkers-Tomczak, Anna
Smant, Geert
Koutsovoulos, Georgios
Blok, Vivian
Mantelin, Sophie
Cock, Peter JA
Phillips, Wendy
Henrissat, Bernard
Urwin, Peter E
Blaxter, Mark
Jones, John T
Publication Date
2016-12Journal Title
Genome Biology
ISSN
1474-7596
Publisher
BioMed Central
Volume
17
Number
124
Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Eves-van den Akker, S., Laetsch, D. R., Thorpe, P., Lilley, C. J., Danchin, E. G., Da Rocha, M., Rancurel, C., et al. (2016). The genome of the yellow potato cyst nematode, Globodera rostochiensis, reveals insights into the basis of parasitism and virulence. Genome Biology, 17 (124) https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-016-0985-1
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The yellow potato cyst nematode, Globodera rostochiensis, is a devastating plant pathogen of global economic importance. This biotrophic parasite secretes effectors from pharyngeal glands, some of which were acquired by horizontal gene transfer, to manipulate host processes and promote parasitism. G. rostochiensis is classified into pathotypes with different plant resistance-breaking phenotypes. RESULTS: We generate a high quality genome assembly for G. rostochiensis pathotype Ro1, identify putative effectors and horizontal gene transfer events, map gene expression through the life cycle focusing on key parasitic transitions and sequence the genomes of eight populations including four additional pathotypes to identify variation. Horizontal gene transfer contributes 3.5 % of the predicted genes, of which approximately 8.5 % are deployed as effectors. Over one-third of all effector genes are clustered in 21 putative ‘effector islands’ in the genome. We identify a dorsal gland promoter element motif (termed DOG Box) present upstream in representatives from 26 out of 28 dorsal gland effector families, and predict a putative effector superset associated with this motif. We validate gland cell expression in two novel genes by in situ hybridisation and catalogue dorsal gland promoter element-containing effectors from available cyst nematode genomes. Comparison of effector diversity between pathotypes highlights correlation with plant resistance-breaking. CONCLUSIONS: These G. rostochiensis genome resources will facilitate major advances in understanding nematode plant-parasitism. Dorsal gland promoter element-containing effectors are at the front line of the evolutionary arms race between plant and parasite and the ability to predict gland cell expression a priori promises rapid advances in understanding their roles and mechanisms of action.
Keywords
Plant-parasitic nematode, Genome sequence, Virulence, Effectors, Horizontal gene transfer
Sponsorship
SE-vdA is supported by BBSRC grant BB/M014207/1. Sequencing was funded by BBSRC grant BB/F000642/1 to the University of Leeds and grant BB/F00334X/1 to the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute). DRL was supported by a fellowship from The James Hutton Institute and the School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh. GK was supported by a BBSRC PhD studentship. The James Hutton Institute receives funding from the Scottish Government. JAC and NEH are supported by the Wellcome Trust through its core funding of the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute (grant 098051). This work was also supported by funding from the Canadian Safety and Security Program, project number CRTI09_462RD.
Funder references
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/F00334X/1)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-016-0985-1
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/277958
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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