Fuente: Proceedings of the National Academy  of Sciences current issue
  Expuesto el: martes, 03 de julio de 2012 16:13
  Autor: Stukenbrock, E. H., Christiansen, F. B., Hansen, T. T., Dutheil,  J. Y., Schierup, M. H.
  Asunto: Fusion of two divergent fungal individuals led to the recent  emergence of a unique widespread pathogen species [Evolution]
| In a    genome alignment of five individuals of the ascomycete fungus Zymoseptoria    pseudotritici, a close relative of the wheat pathogen Z. tritici (synonym    Mycosphaerella graminicola), we observed peculiar diversity patterns. Long    regions up to 100 kb without variation alternate with similarly long regions    of high variability. The variable segments in the genome alignment are    organized into two main haplotype groups that have diverged ∼3% from each other. The genome patterns in Z.    pseudotritici are consistent    with a hybrid speciation event resulting from a cross between two divergent    haploid individuals. The resulting hybrids formed the new species without    backcrossing to the parents. We observe no variation in 54% of the genome in    the five individuals and estimate a complete loss of variation for at least    30% of the genome in the entire species. A strong population bottleneck    following the hybridization event caused this loss of variation. Variable    segments in the Z. pseudotritici genome exhibit the two haplotypes    contributed by the parental individuals. From our previously estimated    recombination map of Z. tritici and the size distribution of variable    chromosome blocks untouched by recombination we estimate that the    hybridization occurred ∼380 sexual generations ago. We show that the amount of    lost variation is explained by genetic drift during the bottleneck and by    natural selection, as evidenced by the correlation of presence/absence of    variation with gene density and recombination rate. The successful spread of    this unique reproductively isolated pathogen highlights the strong potential    of hybridization in the emergence of pathogen species with sexual    reproduction. | 
