The virulence gene ToxB is both amplified and disrupted by transposons in the wheat pathogen Pyrenophora tritici-repentis
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Mechanisms that drive virulence gene duplication in plant pathogenic fungi remain poorly understood. In Pyrenophora tritici-repentis ( Ptr ), responsible for tan spot of wheat, ToxB is a multicopy virulence gene encoding a proteinaceous necrotrophic effector. ToxB exhibits a virulence dosage effect, where higher copy numbers are associated with increased disease severity. In this work, we sought to resolve a 25-year old question as to what drove the proliferation of ToxB within Ptr .
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To investigate this, 23 long-read assemblies were generated and analyzed from a collection of globally distributed isolates with various ToxB copy numbers, with a specific focus on regions containing ToxB .
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Extensive comparative alignments identified a Helitron-like element, ToxB-HLE , that appears to be driving the duplication of ToxB in an accessory region of chromosome 4. This region is entirely absent in isolates lacking ToxB or its nonfunctional homolog toxb . In addition to gene amplification by transposons, multiple independent transposon insertion events were identified in several isolates that disrupted the ToxB open reading frame creating inactive toxb haplotypes.
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This study provides strong evidence supporting the hypothesis that transposons play dual roles in the rapid evolution of fungal pathogenicity by both amplifying and disrupting a key virulence gene in a globally distributed plant pathogen.