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Herbaria in natural history collections illuminate the evolutionary history and emergence of Citrus bacterial canker

Gagnevin Lionel, Campos Paola E, Pruvost Olivier, Boyer Karine, Becker Nathalie, Rieux Adrien. 2023. Herbaria in natural history collections illuminate the evolutionary history and emergence of Citrus bacterial canker. In : 16th Plant Bacteria Meeting. Abstract Booklet. INRAE. Aussois : INRAE, Résumé, 83. Rencontres plantes-bactéries. 16, Aussois, France, 20 Mars 2023/24 Mars 2023.

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Résumé : The field of ancient genomics has triggered considerable progress in the study of various pathogens, including those affecting crops. In this context, herbarium collections have been an important source of dated, identified and preserved DNA, whose use in comparative genomics and phylogeography may shed light into the emergence and evolutionary history of plant pathogens. I will present the reconstruction of 13 historical genomes of the bacterial crop pathogen Xanthomonas citri pv. citri (Xci) from infected citrus herbarium specimens using a shotgun-based deep sequencing strategy. Following authentication of the historical genomes based on ancient DNA damage patterns, we compared them to a large set of modern genomes to reconstruct their phylogenetic relationships, pathogeny-associated genes content and estimate several evolutionary parameters, using Bayesian tip-dating calibration and phylogeography inferences. Our results reveal that Xci originated in Southern Asia ~11,500 years ago and diversified during the beginning of the 13th century, after Citrus diversification and before spreading to the rest of the world. This updated scenario links Xci specialization to Neolithic climatic change and the development of agriculture, and its diversification to the human-driven expansion of citriculture through the early East-West trade and later colonization. The analysis of data obtained from such historical specimens is challenging and must undergo adapted treatment before being compared to modern samples. Nevertheless, we confirm here that herbarium collections are a precious tool to improve the knowledge of the evolutionary history of plant pathogens.

Auteurs et affiliations

  • Gagnevin Lionel, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR PHIM (FRA) ORCID: 0000-0002-2943-0827
  • Campos Paola E, ISYEB (FRA)
  • Pruvost Olivier, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR PVBMT (REU)
  • Boyer Karine, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR PVBMT (REU)
  • Becker Nathalie, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR PVBMT (REU)
  • Rieux Adrien, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR PVBMT (REU) ORCID: 0000-0002-7221-0010

Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/606518/)

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