The novel avirulence effector AlAvr1 from Ascochyta lentis mediates host cultivar specificity of ascochyta blight in lentil

Bernadette M. Henares, Johannes W. Debler, Lina M. Farfan-Caceres, Christina R. Grime, Robert A. Syme, Sara N. Blake, Herdina, Jennifer A. Davidson, Richard P. Oliver, Karam B. Singh, Lars G. Kamphuis, Robert C. Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Citations (Scopus)
21 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Ascochyta lentis is a fungal pathogen that causes ascochyta blight in the important grain legume species lentil, but little is known about the molecular mechanism of disease or host specificity. We employed a map-based cloning approach using a biparental A. lentis population to clone the gene AlAvr1-1 that encodes avirulence towards the lentil cultivar PBA Hurricane XT. The mapping population was produced by mating A. lentis isolate P94-24, which is pathogenic on the cultivar Nipper and avirulent towards Hurricane, and the isolate AlKewell, which is pathogenic towards Hurricane but not Nipper. Using agroinfiltration, we found that AlAvr1-1 from the isolate P94-24 causes necrosis in Hurricane but not in Nipper. The homologous corresponding gene in AlKewell, AlAvr1-2, encodes a protein with amino acid variation at 23 sites and four of these sites have been positively selected in the P94-24 branch of the phylogeny. Loss of AlAvr1-1 in a gene knockout experiment produced a P94-24 mutant strain that is virulent on Hurricane. Deletion of AlAvr1-2 in AlKewell led to reduced pathogenicity on Hurricane, suggesting that the gene may contribute to disease in Hurricane. Deletion of AlAvr1-2 did not affect virulence for Nipper and AlAvr1-2 is therefore not an avirulence gene for Nipper. We conclude that the hemibiotrophic pathogen A. lentis has an avirulence effector, AlAvr1-1, that triggers a hypersensitive resistance response in Hurricane. This is the first avirulence gene to be characterized in a legume pathogen from the Pleosporales and may help progress research on other damaging Ascochyta pathogens.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)984-996
Number of pages13
JournalMolecular Plant Pathology
Volume23
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Ascochyta lentis
  • avirulence
  • Didymellaceae
  • Dothideomycete
  • hemibiotroph
  • Lens culinaris
  • Pleosporales

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The novel avirulence effector AlAvr1 from Ascochyta lentis mediates host cultivar specificity of ascochyta blight in lentil'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this