Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1181702
Título: Long-distance gene flow and recombination shape the evolutionary history of a maize pathogen.
Autoria: ROGÉRIO, F.
OOSTERHOUT, C. V.
MITA, S. de
CUEVAS-FERNÁNDEZ, F. B.
GARCÍA-RODRÍGUEZ, P.
BECERRA, S.
GUTIÉRREZ-SÁNCHEZ, S.
JACQUAT, A. G.
BETTIOL, W.
HOSAKA, G. K.
ULLA, S. B.
HILTBRUNNER, J.
SANTIAGO, R.
REVILLA, P.
DAMBOLENA, J. S.
VICENTE-VILLARDÓN, J. L.
BUHINIČEK, I.
SUKNO, S. A.
THON, M. R.
Afiliação: FLÁVIA ROGÉRIO, UNIVERSIDAD DE SALAMANCA
COCK VAN OOSTERHOUT, UNIVERSITY OF EAST ANGLIA
STÉPHANE DE MITA, UNIVERSITÉ DE MONTPELLIER
FRANCISCO BORJA CUEVAS-FERNÁNDEZ, UNIVERSIDAD DE SALAMANCA
PABLO GARCÍA-RODRÍGUEZ, UNIVERSIDAD DE SALAMANCA
SIOLY BECERRA, UNIVERSIDAD DE SALAMANCA
SILVIA GUTIÉRREZ-SÁNCHEZ, UNIVERSIDAD DE SALAMANCA
ANDRÉS G. JACQUAT, UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL DE CÓRDOBA
WAGNER BETTIOL, CNPMA
GUILHERME KENICHI HOSAKA, UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO
SOFIA B. ULLA, UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL DE CÓRDOBA
JÜRG HILTBRUNNER, AGROSCOPE
ROGELIO SANTIAGO, CONSEJO SUPERIOR DE INVESTIGACIONES CIENTÍFICAS
PEDRO REVILLA, CONSEJO SUPERIOR DE INVESTIGACIONES CIENTÍFICAS
JOSÉ S. DAMBOLENA, UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL DE CÓRDOBA
JOSÉ L. VICENTE-VILLARDÓN, UNIVERSIDAD DE SALAMANCA
IVICA BUHINIČEK, BC INSTITUTE FOR BREEDING AND PRODUCTION OF FIELD CROPS
SERENELLA A. SUKNO, UNIVERSIDAD DE SALAMANCA
MICHAEL R. THON, UNIVERSIDAD DE SALAMANCA.
Ano de publicação: 2025
Referência: IMA Fungus, v.16, e138888, 2025.
Conteúdo: Abstract: The evolutionary history of crop pathogens is shaped by a complex interaction of natural and anthropogenic factors. The fungus Colletotrichumgraminicola causes maize anthracnose which results in significant yield losses worldwide. We conducted a comprehensive investigation into the evolutionary genomics of C.graminicola using a collection of 212 isolates from 17 countries across five continents. Genomic analyses supported the existence of three geographically isolated genetic lineages, with a significant pattern of isolation by distance. We identified two distinct gene flow patterns, driven by short- and long-distance dispersal, likely resulting from the natural spread of the pathogen and the exchange of contaminated seeds. We present evidence of genetic introgression between lineages, suggesting a long history of recombination. We identified significant recombination events coalescing at distinct points in time, with the North American lineage displaying evidence of the most ancient recombination. Demographic modelling has indicated that North America is an intermediate between Brazil, Europe and an ancestral, unsampled source population, which is hypothesised to be Mesoamerican. Our analyses revealed that the global genomic structure of C.graminicola is shaped by geographic differentiation driven by long-distance migration and a long history of recombination and introgression. We show historical relationships amongst these lineages, identifying a potential route for fungal spread, with the North American population emerging ancestrally, followed sequentially by the Brazilian and European populations. Our research indicates that the European lineage is more virulent, which has implications for the potential emergence of new outbreaks of maize anthracnose in Europe.
Thesagro: Milho
Doença Fúngica
Colletotrichum Graminicola
Recombinação
Variação Genética
NAL Thesaurus: Corn
Fungal diseases of plants
Anthracnose
Introgression
Genomics
Palavras-chave: Colletotrichumgraminicola
Genetic introgression
Isolation by distance
Population genomics
Restriction site-associated DNA sequencing
ISSN: 2210-6359
Digital Object Identifier: https://doi.org/10.3897/imafungus.16.138888
Tipo do material: Artigo de periódico
Acesso: openAccess
Aparece nas coleções:Artigo em periódico indexado (CNPMA)

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