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Home Small Things Considered Genomic Secrets of P. infestans, the Master of Potato Blight
Genomic Secrets of P. infestans, the Master of Potato Blight Print E-mail

The Microbe Blog (at http://www.smallthingsconsidered.us)

Elio Schaechter and Merry Youle, fellow writer and editor

http://schaechter.asmblog.org/schaechter/ 2009/11/genomic-secrets-of-pinfestans-the-master-of-potato-blight.html

 

No fungicide has ever been found to which P. infestans could not ultimately adjust . . . Indeed, no potato has ever been developed with defenses that Phytophthora could not ultimately breach.
--Glenn Garelik

More than 150 years after the historic Irish potato famine, the deadly pathogen responsible for potato blight, Phytophthora infestans,
is now destroying more than $3 billion worth of potatoes each year. What is the secret of its pathogenic success? Hoping to find some answers in its genome, a team of 96 researchers have sequenced virtually its entire 240-Mb genome. This is by far the largest and most complex genome sequenced among the chromalveolates, a diverse eukaryote supergroup that includes not only the stramenopiles (the oomycetes, diatoms, and some algae) but also the dinoflagellates and the apicomplexans.

Why so much DNA? That's more than double that of Caenorhabditis elegans.
Tellingly, though, the number of genes in this oomycete is not twice as large. It is only about 18,000 versus 19,000 for the worm. Closer to home, we can compare P. infestans against two other species, proficient pathogens both, that represent the other two major Phytophthora clades. They both get by with far less DNA: the soybean root rot pathogen, P. sojae, with 95 Mb, and the sudden oak death pathogen, P. ramorum,
with a mere 65 Mb. The gene count is similar in all three species.

What P. infestans
has is more repetitive DNA in the form of more mobile elements. All told, 74% of its genome is repetitive DNA. The many active mobile elements therein are thought to be driving both the overall expansion of its genome and the expansion of particular gene families. About a third of the genome is the result of recent proliferation of gypsy elements, a group of LTR retrotransposons. Also of special interest are the 273 Helitron DNA transposons. (Helitrons are transposons found in eukaryotes that replicate by a rolling circle mechanism.) This is 10 times as many as in the other two Phytophthora
species and many more than have been found in any other eukaryote genome to date. So what? They have been implicated in rapid evolution in the maize genome, in particular in the multiplication of related gene fragments- thus likely to be of use to a quickfooted pathogen.

Overall, the P. infestans
genome shows an unusual pattern of gene distribution. Most of the genes are found in blocks with little repetitive DNA, while most of the mobile elements are clustered in blocks that contain relatively few genes. However, one quarter of the genes are found in the mobile element-rich blocks, and these include large families of effector proteins implicated in pathogenesis. One group is translocated directly into plant cells by specialized structures called haustoria. The archetypal oomycete cytoplasmic effectors are the RXLR proteins, so named because the four amino acids at the amino-terminal end are Arg-X-Leu-Arg (where X represents any amino acid). This short motif tags the protein for delivery to the inside of the plant cell. The other end of these proteins is a variable effector domain. Not only are these RXLR proteins more numerous in P. infestans than in P. sojae and P. ramorum, but they are also diversifying more rapidly and turning over faster. Half of them are found in P. infestans only. Another group of effectors, the Crinkler or CRN cytoplasmic effectors, has likewise expanded in P. infestans into an enormous family of unexpected complexity and diversity. Helitrons have been implicated in their diversification. Referring to both groups, the researchers note:

This expansion provides a species-specific repertoire of effector genes, the dynamic nature of which probably provides an advantage in the arms race with host species.

Given the diversity of effector proteins already present in P. infestans
, plus their rapid ongoing evolution, the potatoes with their repertoire of resistance factors have little chance. Most plant breeders and researchers have given up the search for a host resistance factor-or even a combination of a half dozen or more-that can provide "durable" resistance against infection. Likewise, the effectiveness of even our most effective pesticide is on the wane. Perhaps it is time to fight fire with fire. P. infestans
does have its parasites, its viruses. Perhaps if we partner with them, we will have a sporting chance in the arms race against the blight. Perhaps.

Haas, B. J., S. Kamoun, M. C. Zody, R. H. Jiang, R. E. Handsaker, et al. 2009. Genome sequence and analysis of the Irish potato famine pathogen Phytophthora infestans.
Nature 461:393-398.


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