Frédéric Suffert, Stéphanie Le Prieur, Sandrine Gélisse, Emmie Dzialo, Cyrille Saintenac, Thierry C. Marcel
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We developed a method for ‘bulk phenotyping on checkerboard microcanopies of wheat near‐isogenic lines’ (BPC) for estimating the frequency of virulence against a resistance gene in mixed populations of the fungal pathogen <jats:italic>Zymoseptoria tritici</jats:italic>, the causal agent of Septoria tritici blotch (STB) in wheat, without the need for strain‐by‐strain pathogen phenotyping. Our method involves the uniform inoculation of a microcanopy of two wheat lines—one with the target resistance gene and the other without it—with a multistrain mixture of isolates representative of the population to be characterized, followed by the differential quantification of infection points (lesions). Using <jats:italic>Stb16q</jats:italic>, a wheat resistance gene that has recently broken down in Europe, we found a robust correlation between the ratio of the mean number of lesions on each wheat line and the frequency of virulent strains in the inoculum. Using pairs of virulent and avirulent strains, as well as synthetic populations consisting of 10 virulent strains and 10 avirulent strains mixed in different proportions, we validated the principle of the method and established standard curves at virulence frequencies close to those observed in natural conditions. We discuss the potential of this method for virulence monitoring in combination with molecular methods.","PeriodicalId":20075,"journal":{"name":"Plant Pathology","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Estimating the frequency of virulence against an Stb gene in Zymoseptoria tritici populations by bulk phenotyping on checkerboard microcanopies of wheat near‐isogenic lines\",\"authors\":\"Frédéric Suffert, Stéphanie Le Prieur, Sandrine Gélisse, Emmie Dzialo, Cyrille Saintenac, Thierry C. 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Estimating the frequency of virulence against an Stb gene in Zymoseptoria tritici populations by bulk phenotyping on checkerboard microcanopies of wheat near‐isogenic lines
Monitoring virulent strains within pathogen populations is crucial to improve host resistance deployment strategies. Such monitoring increasingly involves field pathogenomics studies of molecular polymorphisms in pathogen genomes based on high‐throughput screening technologies. However, it is not always straightforward to predict virulence phenotypes from these polymorphisms, and in planta phenotyping remains necessary. We developed a method for ‘bulk phenotyping on checkerboard microcanopies of wheat near‐isogenic lines’ (BPC) for estimating the frequency of virulence against a resistance gene in mixed populations of the fungal pathogen Zymoseptoria tritici, the causal agent of Septoria tritici blotch (STB) in wheat, without the need for strain‐by‐strain pathogen phenotyping. Our method involves the uniform inoculation of a microcanopy of two wheat lines—one with the target resistance gene and the other without it—with a multistrain mixture of isolates representative of the population to be characterized, followed by the differential quantification of infection points (lesions). Using Stb16q, a wheat resistance gene that has recently broken down in Europe, we found a robust correlation between the ratio of the mean number of lesions on each wheat line and the frequency of virulent strains in the inoculum. Using pairs of virulent and avirulent strains, as well as synthetic populations consisting of 10 virulent strains and 10 avirulent strains mixed in different proportions, we validated the principle of the method and established standard curves at virulence frequencies close to those observed in natural conditions. We discuss the potential of this method for virulence monitoring in combination with molecular methods.
期刊介绍:
This international journal, owned and edited by the British Society for Plant Pathology, covers all aspects of plant pathology and reaches subscribers in 80 countries. Top quality original research papers and critical reviews from around the world cover: diseases of temperate and tropical plants caused by fungi, bacteria, viruses, phytoplasmas and nematodes; physiological, biochemical, molecular, ecological, genetic and economic aspects of plant pathology; disease epidemiology and modelling; disease appraisal and crop loss assessment; and plant disease control and disease-related crop management.