Genic introgression from an invasive exotic fungal forest pathogen increases the establishment potential of a sibling native pathogen

Significant hybridization between the invasive North American fungal plant pathogen Heterobasidion irregulare and its Eurasian sister species H. annosum is ongoing in Italy. Whole genomes of nine natural hybrids were sequenced, assembled and compared with those of three genotypes eac...

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Main Authors: Fabiano Sillo, Matteo Garbelotto, Luana Giordano, Paolo Gonthier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2021-05-01
Series:NeoBiota
Online Access:https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/64031/download/pdf/
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spelling doaj-48011eaa1e804946ad3c991a281d82dd2021-09-28T14:23:54ZengPensoft PublishersNeoBiota1314-24882021-05-016510913610.3897/neobiota.65.6403164031Genic introgression from an invasive exotic fungal forest pathogen increases the establishment potential of a sibling native pathogenFabiano Sillo0Matteo Garbelotto1Luana Giordano2Paolo Gonthier3National Research Council - Institute for Sustainable Plant ProtectionUniversity of CaliforniaUniversity of TorinoUniversity of Torino Significant hybridization between the invasive North American fungal plant pathogen Heterobasidion irregulare and its Eurasian sister species H. annosum is ongoing in Italy. Whole genomes of nine natural hybrids were sequenced, assembled and compared with those of three genotypes each of the two parental species. Genetic relationships among hybrids and their level of admixture were determined. A multi-approach pipeline was used to assign introgressed genomic blocks to each of the two species. Alleles that introgressed from H. irregulare to H. annosum were associated with pathways putatively related to saprobic processes, while alleles that introgressed from the native to the invasive species were mainly linked to gene regulation. There was no overlap of allele categories introgressed in the two directions. Phenotypic experiments documented a fitness increase in H. annosum genotypes characterized by introgression of alleles from the invasive species, supporting the hypothesis that hybridization results in putatively adaptive introgression. Conversely, introgression from the native into the exotic species appeared to be driven by selection on genes favoring genome stability. Since the introgression of specific alleles from the exotic H. irregulare into the native H. annosum increased the invasiveness of the latter species, we propose that two invasions may be co-occurring: the first one by genotypes of the exotic species, and the second one by alleles belonging to the exotic species. Given that H. irregulare represents a threat to European forests, monitoring programs need to track not only exotic genotypes in native forest stands, but also exotic alleles introgressed in native genotypes. https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/64031/download/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fabiano Sillo
Matteo Garbelotto
Luana Giordano
Paolo Gonthier
spellingShingle Fabiano Sillo
Matteo Garbelotto
Luana Giordano
Paolo Gonthier
Genic introgression from an invasive exotic fungal forest pathogen increases the establishment potential of a sibling native pathogen
NeoBiota
author_facet Fabiano Sillo
Matteo Garbelotto
Luana Giordano
Paolo Gonthier
author_sort Fabiano Sillo
title Genic introgression from an invasive exotic fungal forest pathogen increases the establishment potential of a sibling native pathogen
title_short Genic introgression from an invasive exotic fungal forest pathogen increases the establishment potential of a sibling native pathogen
title_full Genic introgression from an invasive exotic fungal forest pathogen increases the establishment potential of a sibling native pathogen
title_fullStr Genic introgression from an invasive exotic fungal forest pathogen increases the establishment potential of a sibling native pathogen
title_full_unstemmed Genic introgression from an invasive exotic fungal forest pathogen increases the establishment potential of a sibling native pathogen
title_sort genic introgression from an invasive exotic fungal forest pathogen increases the establishment potential of a sibling native pathogen
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series NeoBiota
issn 1314-2488
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Significant hybridization between the invasive North American fungal plant pathogen Heterobasidion irregulare and its Eurasian sister species H. annosum is ongoing in Italy. Whole genomes of nine natural hybrids were sequenced, assembled and compared with those of three genotypes each of the two parental species. Genetic relationships among hybrids and their level of admixture were determined. A multi-approach pipeline was used to assign introgressed genomic blocks to each of the two species. Alleles that introgressed from H. irregulare to H. annosum were associated with pathways putatively related to saprobic processes, while alleles that introgressed from the native to the invasive species were mainly linked to gene regulation. There was no overlap of allele categories introgressed in the two directions. Phenotypic experiments documented a fitness increase in H. annosum genotypes characterized by introgression of alleles from the invasive species, supporting the hypothesis that hybridization results in putatively adaptive introgression. Conversely, introgression from the native into the exotic species appeared to be driven by selection on genes favoring genome stability. Since the introgression of specific alleles from the exotic H. irregulare into the native H. annosum increased the invasiveness of the latter species, we propose that two invasions may be co-occurring: the first one by genotypes of the exotic species, and the second one by alleles belonging to the exotic species. Given that H. irregulare represents a threat to European forests, monitoring programs need to track not only exotic genotypes in native forest stands, but also exotic alleles introgressed in native genotypes.
url https://neobiota.pensoft.net/article/64031/download/pdf/
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