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Contact:
Dr. Ralph Dean,
919/513-0020
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470
April
20,
2005
Researchers
Uncover Genome Sequence of Major Rice Pathogen
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
In
a genomics milestone, an international consortium
of researchers
has for the first time lifted the veil
from a fungal plant pathogen by sequencing the genome – or
set of all genes – of the most destructive enemy
of rice: Magnaporthe grisea, the fungus that causes
rice blast disease.
Dr.
Ralph Dean, professor of plant pathology and director
of North Carolina State University’s
Center for Integrated Fungal Research, is the lead
author of a
research paper that describes the M. grisea genome,
published in the April 21 issue of the journal Nature. It is estimated that rice blast, the leading cause
of rice loss, is responsible each year for killing
enough rice to feed 60 million people worldwide.
In the Nature paper, Dean and his co-authors shed
some light on the adaptations required by a fungus
to cause disease. The researchers identify novel receptors
that allow the fungus to recognize its environment;
secreted proteins that are likely used as offensive
weapons to damage rice plants; and redundant, or duplicate,
mechanisms that protect the fungus from efforts to
fight against it.
“It’s a clever system,” Dean says. “If
you have important genes, you tend to have a lot of
them.”
The paper
also reports that the M. grisea genome contains retro-elements,
or remnants of viruses, living in what
Dean calls “hot spots” in the genome.
“These virus remnants live in discreet parts
of the genome and have high rates of recombination,
which may be why the fungus can evolve new strains
so quickly,” Dean says.
M.
grisea undoubtedly produces toxins which may
enable it to be a more effective pathogen. However
our knowledge
is limited to date, Dean says. The genome sequence
should
give researchers “a better idea of what types
of genes are involved in making the toxin molecules,” he
says.
Some of these genes reside in clusters, Dean says,
so one focus will be to take apart the clusters and
learn more about toxins and their production.
“The primary mission is to uncover the organism’s
weaknesses. You do that by building up an arsenal of
information of what genes are involved in plant-pathogen
interactions,” Dean says.
In July 2002, Dean and researchers from the Whitehead
Institute at MIT, now called the Broad Institute, issued
a preliminary genome sequence of M. grisea, and made
it publicly available so other researchers could work
to solve the problems rice blast presents.
“That work decoded the string of letters that
comprise the genome,” Dean says. “This
paper shows the work of the last two years in bringing
this genome to life.”
Bringing the genome to life means capturing the biological
meaning of the genome, Dean says. To do this, he and
his colleagues used two strategies: comparative genomics
and functional genomics.
“In comparative genomics, you compare this
genome to that of other organisms, other fungi,” Dean
says. “But fungi are very diverse; they’ve
evolved tremendously. Fungi within the same family
are as dissimilar as man is to a frog.”
In functional genomics, Dean explains, scientists
use comparative genomics to get hints about where to
concentrate their study efforts.
“M.
grisea contains about 11,000 genes, so
you can’t look at every one,” he says. “The
comparative study allows us to look at novel classes
of genes and novel proteins and prioritize study efforts.”
-
kulikowski -
Editor’s
note: An abstract of the
Nature paper follows. “The
Genome Sequence of the Rice Blast Fungus Magnaporthe
grisea”
Authors: Ralph Dean, Thomas Mitchell, Resham Kulkarni,
Huaqin Pan, Ignazio Carbone, Doug Brown, Yeon Yee,
Nicole Donofrio, Robert Nicol, North Carolina State
University; et al
Published: April 21, 2005, in Nature
Abstract: Magnaporthe
grisea is the most destructive
pathogen of rice worldwide and the principal model
organism for elucidating the molecular basis of fungal
disease of plants. Here, we report the draft sequence
of the M. grisea genome. Analysis of the gene set provides
an insight into the adaptations required by a fungus
to cause disease. The genome encodes a large and diverse
set of secreted proteins, including those defined by
unusual carbohydrate-binding
domains. This fungus also possesses an expanded family
of G-protein-coupled receptors, several new virulence-associated
genes, and large suites of enzymes involved in secondary
metabolism. Consistent with a role in fungal pathogenesis,
the expression of several of these genes is upregulated
during the early stages of infection-related development.
The M. grisea genome has been subject to invasion and
proliferation of active transposable elements, reflecting
the clonal nature of this fungus imposed by widespread
rice cultivation.
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