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Rapid and multiregional adaptation to host partial resistance in a plant pathogenic oomycete: Evidence from European populations of Plasmopara viticola,the causal agent of grapevine downy mildew
Affiliation:1. Instituto de Ciencias de la Vid y del Vino (CSIC, UR, Gobierno de La Rioja), Logroño, Spain;2. Instituto Murciano de Investigación y Desarrollo Agrario y Alimentario, Murcia, Spain;3. Instituto Tecnológico Agrario de Castilla y León, Valladolid, Spain;1. CRA-Centro di Ricerca per la Viticoltura (CRA-VIT), Conegliano, Italy;2. Istituto di Frutti-Viticoltura, Università Cattolica S. Cuore, Piacenza, Italy;3. Università degli Studi, Milano, Italy;4. Research and Innovation Centre, Fondazione Edmund Mach, San Michele all’Adige, Italy;5. University of Udine, Udine, Italy;6. Istituto di Genomica Applicata, Udine, Italy;1. Departamento de Biología Molecular, Área de Biología Celular, Universidad de León, León, Spain;2. Departamento de Botânica, Instituto de Biologia, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil;3. Departamento de Biodiversidad y Gestión Ambiental, Área de Zoología, Universidad de León, León, Spain;4. Departamento de Biodiversidad y Gestión Ambiental, Área de Botánica, Universidad de León, León, Spain
Abstract:Crop pathogens evolve rapidly to adapt to their hosts. The use of crops with quantitative disease resistance is expected to alter selection of pathogen life-history traits. This may result in differential adaptation of the pathogen to host cultivars and, sometimes, to the erosion of quantitative resistance. Here, we assessed the level of host adaptation in an oomycete plant pathogenic species. We analysed the phenotypic and genetic variability of 17 Plasmopara viticola isolates collected on Vitis vinifera and 35 isolates from partially resistant varieties (Regent and genotypes carrying the Rpv1 gene). Cross-inoculation experiments assessed two components of aggressiveness and a life-history trait of the pathogen: disease severity, sporangial production and sporangia size. The results contribute evidence to the emergence of P. viticola aggressive isolates presenting a high level of sporulation on the partially resistant Regent. By contrast, no adaptation to the Rpv1 gene was found in this study. The erosion of Regent resistance may have occurred in less than 5 years and at least three times independently in three distant wine-producing areas. Populations from resistant varieties showed a significant increase in sporangia production capacity, indicating an absence of fitness costs for this adaptation. The increase in the number of sporangia was correlated with a reduction in sporangia size, a result which illustrates how partial plant disease resistance can impact selection of the pathogen’s life-history traits. This case study on grapevine downy mildew shows how new plant pathogen populations emerge in agro-ecosystems by adapting to partial host resistance. This adaptive pattern highlights the need for wise management of plant partial disease resistance to ensure its sustainability over time.
Keywords:Erosion of quantitative host resistance  Fungal plant pathogen  Aggressiveness  Life-history traits  Regent grape cultivar
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