Evolution of wheat blast resistance gene Rmg8 accompanied by differentiation of variants recognizing the powdery mildew fungus
Wheat blast, a devastating disease having spread recently from South America to Asia and Africa, is caused by Pyricularia oryzae (synonym of Magnaporthe oryzae ) pathotype Triticum , which first emerged in Brazil in 1985. Rmg8 and Rmg7 , genes for resistance to wheat blast found in common wheat and...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature plants 2024-06, Vol.10 (6), p.971-983 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Wheat blast, a devastating disease having spread recently from South America to Asia and Africa, is caused by
Pyricularia oryzae
(synonym of
Magnaporthe oryzae
) pathotype
Triticum
, which first emerged in Brazil in 1985.
Rmg8
and
Rmg7
, genes for resistance to wheat blast found in common wheat and tetraploid wheat, respectively, recognize the same avirulence gene,
AVR-Rmg8
. Here we show that an ancestral resistance gene, which had obtained an ability to recognize
AVR-Rmg8
before the differentiation of
Triticum
and
Aegilops
, has expanded its target pathogens. Molecular cloning revealed that
Rmg7
was an allele of
Pm4
, a gene for resistance to wheat powdery mildew on 2AL, whereas
Rmg8
was its homoeologue on 2BL ineffective against wheat powdery mildew.
Rmg8
variants with the ability to recognize
AVR-Rmg8
were distributed not only in
Triticum
spp. but also in
Aegilops speltoides
,
Ae
gilops
umbellulata
and
Ae
gilops
comosa
. This result suggests that the origin of resistance gene(s) recognizing
AVR-Rmg8
dates back to the time before differentiation of A, B, S, U and M genomes, that is, ~5 Myr before the emergence of its current target, the wheat blast fungus. Phylogenetic analyses suggested that, in the evolutionary process thereafter, some of their variants gained the ability to recognize the wheat powdery mildew fungus and evolved into genes controlling dual resistance to wheat powdery mildew and wheat blast.
Rmg8
and
Rmg7
, genes for resistance to wheat blast, proved to be a homoeologue and an allele of
Pm4
, a gene for resistance to powdery mildew. Their functional homologues were also found in
Aegilops
spp., suggesting that their origin dates back to the time before differentiation of
Triticum
and
Aegilops
. |
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ISSN: | 2055-0278 2055-0278 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41477-024-01711-1 |