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Genomic surveillance uncovers a pandemic clonal lineage of the wheat blast fungus.

Sergio M LatorreVincent M WereAndrew J FosterThorsten LangnerAngus MalmgrenAdeline HarantSoichiro AsukeSarai Reyes-AvilaDipali Rani GuptaCassandra JensenWeibin MaNur Uddin MahmudMd Shåbab MehebubRabson M MulengaAbu Naim Md MuzahidSanjoy Kumar PaulS M Fajle RabbyAbdullah Al Mahbub RahatLauren RyderRam-Krishna ShresthaSuwilanji SichilimaDarren M SoanesPawan Kumar SinghAlison R BentleyDiane G O SaundersYukio TosaDaniel CrollKurt H LamourTofazzal IslamBatiseba TemboJoe WinNicholas J TalbotHernán A BurbanoSophien Kamoun
Published in: PLoS biology (2023)
Wheat, one of the most important food crops, is threatened by a blast disease pandemic. Here, we show that a clonal lineage of the wheat blast fungus recently spread to Asia and Africa following two independent introductions from South America. Through a combination of genome analyses and laboratory experiments, we show that the decade-old blast pandemic lineage can be controlled by the Rmg8 disease resistance gene and is sensitive to strobilurin fungicides. However, we also highlight the potential of the pandemic clone to evolve fungicide-insensitive variants and sexually recombine with African lineages. This underscores the urgent need for genomic surveillance to track and mitigate the spread of wheat blast outside of South America and to guide preemptive wheat breeding for blast resistance.
Keyphrases
  • sars cov
  • coronavirus disease
  • copy number
  • public health
  • single cell
  • human health
  • risk assessment
  • gene expression
  • climate change
  • dna methylation