A new set of international Leptosphaeria maculans isolates as a resource for elucidation of the basis and evolution of blackleg disease on Brassica napus
Authors
Van de Wouw, AP, Scanlan, JL, Al-Mamun, HA, Balesdent, M-H, Bousset, L, Burketová, L, del Rio Mendoza, L, Fernando, WGD, Franke, C, Howlett, BJ, Huang, Y-J, Jones, Elizabeth, Koopmann, B, Lob, S, Mirabadi, AZ, Nugent, BC, Peng, G, Rossi, FR, Schreuder, H, Tabone, AR, Van Coller, GJ, Batley, J, Idnurm, A
Date
2024-01
Type
Journal Article
Collections
Fields of Research
300404 Crop and pasture biochemistry and physiology, 300406 Crop and pasture improvement (incl. selection and breeding), 300409 Crop and pasture protection (incl. pests, diseases and weeds), 300804 Horticultural crop protection (incl. pests, diseases and weeds), 3004 Crop and pasture production, 3108 Plant biology
Abstract
A collection of isolates of the fungi Leptosphaeria maculans and L. biglobosa, which cause blackleg disease on Brassica napus (canola/oilseed rape) and other Brassicaceae species, was assembled to represent the global diversity of these pathogens and a resource for international research. The collection consists of 226 isolates (205 L. maculans and 21 L. biglobosa) from 11 countries. The genomes of all 205 L. maculans isolates were sequenced, and the distribution and identity of avirulence gene alleles were determined based on genotypic information and phenotypic reactions on B. napus lines that hosted specific resistance genes. Whilst the frequencies of some avirulence alleles were consistent across each of the regions, others differed dramatically, potentially reflecting the canola/oilseed rape cultivars grown in those countries. Analyses of the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) diversity within these L. maculans isolates revealed geographical separation of the populations. This "open access" resource provides a standardized set of isolates that can be used to define the basis for how these fungal pathogens cause disease, and as a tool for discovery of new resistance traits in Brassica species.
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© 2023 The Authors. Plant Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Society for Plant Pathology.
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