4.3 Article

Quantitative interactions: the disease outcome of Botrytis cinerea across the plant kingdom

Journal

G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/g3journal/jkab175

Keywords

plant-pathogen interactions; Botrytis cinerea; fungus; host specificity; generalist pathogen; polygenic virulence; plant domestication

Funding

  1. National science foundation (USA), division of integrative organismal system [IOS1339125, IOS1021861]

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The interaction between Botrytis cinerea and its diverse hosts is largely determined by variations in host resistance or pathogen virulence, with specific interactions accounting for a portion of the disease outcome. The disease outcomes cluster among genotypes of a species but are independent of host relatedness. Generalist strains of B. cinerea are predominant, suggesting that specialization may occur through a loss of virulence on most hosts rather than an increase on a specific host.
Botrytis cinerea is a fungal pathogen that causes necrotic disease on more than a thousand known hosts widely spread across the plant kingdom. How B. cinerea interacts with such extensive host diversity remains largely unknown. To address this question, we generated an infectivity matrix of 98 strains of B. cinerea on 90 genotypes representing eight host plants. This experimental infectivity matrix revealed that the disease outcome is largely explained by variations in either the host resistance or pathogen virulence. However, the specific interactions between host and pathogen account for 16% of the disease outcome. Furthermore, the disease outcomes cluster among genotypes of a species but are independent of the relatedness between hosts. When analyzing the host specificity and virulence of B. cinerea, generalist strains are predominant. In this fungal necrotroph, specialization may happen by a loss in virulence on most hosts rather than an increase of virulence on a specific host. To uncover the genetic architecture of Botrytis host specificity and virulence, a genome-wide association study (GWAS) was performed and revealed up to 1492 genes of interest. The genetic architecture of these traits is widespread across the B. cinerea genome. The complexity of the disease outcome might be explained by hundreds of functionally diverse genes putatively involved in adjusting the infection to diverse hosts.

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