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Virulence Profiles and Genome-Wide Association Study for Ascochyta lentis Isolates Collected from Australian Lentil-Growing Regions

  • Bernadette M. Henares
  • , Sara N. Blake
  • , Lina Farfan-Caceres
  • , Hediyeh Tahghighi
  • , Johannes W. Debler
  • , Michelle H. Russ
  • , Elizabeth A. Farquharson
  • , Jade A. Rose
  • , Mohsen Khani
  • , Jennifer A. Davidson
  • , Lars G. Kamphuis
  • , Robert C. Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Ascochyta lentis, the causal organism of Ascochyta blight (AB) of lentil (Lens culinaris), has been shown to produce an avirulence effector protein that mediates AB resistance in certain lentil cultivars. The two known forms of the effector protein were identified from a biparental mapping population between isolates that have reciprocal virulence on ‘PBAHurricaneXT’ and ‘Nipper’. The effector AlAvr1-1was described for the PBAHurricaneXT-avirulent isolate P94-24 andAlAvr1-2 characterized in the PBA Hurricane XT-virulent isolate AlKewell. Here, we performed a genome-wide association study to identify other loci associated with AB for a differential set of lentil cultivars from a diverse panel of isolates collected in the Australian lentil-growing regions from 2013 to 2020. The chromosome 3 AlAvr1 locus was strongly associated with the PBA Hurricane XT, ‘Indianhead’, and Nipper disease responses, but one other genomic region on chromosome 11 was also associated with the Nipper disease trait. Our results corroborate earlier work that identified the AlAvr1 locus for field-collected isolates that span the period before release and after widespread adoption of PBA Hurricane XT. A multiplex PCR assay was developed to differentiate the genes AlAvr1-1 and AlAvr1-2 to predict PBA Hurricane XT avirulence and pathotype designation in the diversity panel. Increasing numbers of the PBA Hurricane XT-virulent pathotype 2 isolates across that time indicate strong selection for isolates with the AlAvr1-2 allele. Furthermore, one other region of the A. lentis genome may contribute to the pathogen-host interaction for lentil AB.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1515-1524
Number of pages10
JournalPhytopathology
Volume113
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • AlAvr1
  • Ascochyta blight
  • DArTseq
  • Didymella lentis
  • dothideomycete
  • genome-wide association study
  • grain legume
  • pulse disease

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