4.5 Article

The Urochloa Foliar Blight and Collar Rot Pathogen Rhizoctonia solani AG-1 IA Emerged in South America Via a Host Shift from Rice

Journal

PHYTOPATHOLOGY
Volume 105, Issue 11, Pages 1475-1486

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PHYTO-04-15-0093-R

Keywords

gene flow; pathogen emergence; pathogen origins

Categories

Funding

  1. FAPESP (Sao Paulo Research Foundation, Brazil)-Biota [2011/50150-3]
  2. CNPq (Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development) [Pq-2 308394/2009-7, Pq-2 307361/2012-8, 481756/2010-8, 485244/2012-8, 454543/2013-1]
  3. FAPESP [2011/23050-8, 2013/11944-0]
  4. CNPq-DR [140564/2009-8]
  5. CAPES
  6. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo (FAPESP) [13/11944-0, 11/23050-8] Funding Source: FAPESP

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The fungus Rhizoctonia solani anastomosis group (AG)-1 IA emerged in the early 1990s as an important pathogen causing foliar blight and collar rot on pastures of the genus Urochloa (signalgrass) in South America. We tested the hypothesis that this pathogen emerged following a host shift or jump as a result of geographical overlapping of host species. The genetic structure of host and regional populations of R. solani AG-1 IA infecting signalgrass, rice, and soybean in Colombia and Brazil was analyzed using nine microsatellite loci in 350 isolates to measure population differentiation and infer the pathogen reproductive system. Phylogeographical analyses based on the microsatellite loci and on three DNA sequence loci were used to infer historical migration patterns and test hypotheses about the origin of the current pathogen populations. Cross pathogenicity assays were conducted to measure the degree of host specialization in populations sampled from different hosts. The combined analyses indicate that the pathogen populations currently infecting Urochloa in Colombia and Brazil most likely originated from a population that originally infected rice. R. solani AG-1 IA populations infecting Urochloa exhibit a mixed reproductive system including both sexual reproduction and long-distance dispersal of adapted clones, most likely on infected seed. The pathogen population on Urochloa has a genetic structure consistent with a high evolutionary potential and showed evidence for host specialization.

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