Title
Genomic resources to study virulence and evolution of cereal rust fungi
Abstract
Stem rust caused by Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici (Pgt) and crown rust caused by Pucciniacoronata f. sp. avenae (Pca) are global threats the production of wheat and oat, respectively.
Fast evolving populations of both Pgt and Pca limit the efficacy of plant genetic resistance
and constrain disease management strategies. Chapter 1 provides background information
about both rust fungi and their biology, shares a comprehensive review of the available
genome resources in the rusts, and highlights some advancements in rust research and how
they can be utilized. Chapter 2 describes a study where my colleagues and I developed a
pipeline for identifying candidate susceptibility genes for future study of stem rust
virulence using comparative transcriptome-based and orthology-guided approaches. The
analysis was targeted to genes with differential expression in T. aestivum and genes
suppressed or not affected in B. distachyon and reports several processes potentially linked
to susceptibility to Pgt, such as cell death suppression and impairment of photosynthesis.
The approach was complemented with a gene co-expression network analysis to identify
wheat targets to deliver resistance to Pgt through removal or modification of putative
susceptibility genes. This work could help further the understanding of the molecular
mechanisms that lead to rust infection and disease susceptibility; this in turn could deliver
novel strategies to deploy crop resistance through genetic loss of disease susceptibility. A
significant contribution of this work is a pipeline that can be adapted to study virulence of
other rust fungi. Finally, Chapter 3 describes a high-quality genome assembly of Pca
isolate 203. The ultimate goal of the assembly is to provide the first fully haplotype-phased,
chromosome level reference for Pca. To this end, PacBio long reads and Illumina short
reads were obtained to create the initial draft assembly, while Hi-C reads were collected to
order contigs and phase the genome. Contigs were assigned to haplotype bins using gene
synteny initially, and these bins were aligned to the Pgt 21-0 A haplotype genome to
evaluate the probable number of chromosomes and possible chromosome sizes. Future
steps for completing the high-quality assembly include an iterative process to fix haplotype
phase swaps through manual curation and scaffolding, final chromosome assignment, and
annotation with RNAseq data. A collection of publications with my contributions is
provided in the appendix section.
Description
University of Minnesota M.S. thesis. May 2021. Major: Plant Pathology. Advisor: Brian Steffenson. 1 computer file (PDF); viii, 104 pages.
Suggested Citation
Henningsen, Eva.
(2021).
Genomic resources to study virulence and evolution of cereal rust fungi.
Retrieved from the University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy,
https://hdl.handle.net/11299/223086.