Quercus has been reported as the genus with the largest number of attacking powdery mildews. In Europe, oak powdery mildew was rarely reported before 1907, when severe outbreaks were observed. These epidemics were attributed to the newly described species Erysiphe alphitoides, presumed to be of exotic origin. After the burst of interest following the emergence of the disease, research on this topic remained very limited. Interest in research was recently reactivated in response to the availability of molecular tools. This review summarizes current knowledge on the diversity of oak powdery mildews in Europe and their possible evolutionary relationships with European oaks. The most striking results are the evidence of cryptic diversity (detection in France of a lineage closely related to Erysiphe quercicola, previously thought to only have an Asian distribution), large host range (similarity of E. alphitoides and E. quercicola with powdery mildews of tropical plants) but also local adaptation to Quercus robur. These recent findings highlight the complexity of the history of oak powdery mildew in Europe and point to the question of host specialization and host jumps in the evolution of powdery mildew fungi.
Abstract• Powdery mildew is a major fungal disease of oaks in Europe. Recent studies using internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences suggested the presence of four different lineages (putative species). The objective of the study was to investigate the spatial distribution of these lineages/species and, in particular, to test the hypothesis of a spatial differentiation, at various scales: regional (France), altitudinal (a Pyrenean transect) and local (within a forest plot).• Detection methods for the four ITS types were developed: (1) single strand conformation polymorphism analysis (SSCP); (2) PCR amplifications, for which specific primers were designed. SSCP proved to be efficient for the detection of Erysiphe alphitoides and E. quercicola types. In contrast, the rarer ITS types corresponding to E. hypophylla and Phyllactinia guttata (sensu lato) were only detected by specific amplification.• The study confirmed the strong predominance of the ITS sequence associated with E. alphitoides at all spatial scales (with a frequency higher than 80%). Isolates presumably belonging to E. quercicola (i.e. with same ITS type), a recently described species not yet recorded in Europe, were also found in all French regions at a significant frequency (15% at national level).• No pattern of spatial differentiation between the putative species could be demonstrated: E. alphitoides was often found in association with different ITS types in the same region, the same tree, and even in the same lesion. Mots-clés :Erysiphe alphitoides / Erysiphe quercicola / espèces sryptiques / Erysiphales / ITS / invasion biologique Résumé -Distribution spatiale de lignées d'oïdium des chênes en France analysée à l'aide d'outils rapides de caractérisation moléculaire.• L'oïdium est l'une des maladies fongiques les plus importantes sur chênes en Europe. Des études récentes basées sur l'internal transcribed spacer (ITS) ont suggéré l'implication de quatre lignées (espèces putatives) différentes. L'objectif de l'étude était de caractériser la distribution spatiale de ces lignées/espèces et en particulier de tester l'hypothèse d'une différenciation spatiale à plusieurs échelles : régionale (France), altitudinale (transect pyrénéen) et locale (au sein d'une parcelle forestière).• Des méthodes de détection des quatre types d'ITS ont été développées : (1) analyse SCCP ; (2) amplification par PCR de l'ITS par des amorces spécifiques. La SSCP a permis de détecter facilement les ITS correspondant à E. alphitoides et E. quercicola. Par contre, les ITS plus rares correspondant à E. hypophylla et Phyllactinia guttata (sensu lato) n'ont été détectés que par amplification spécifique.• L'étude a confirmé la forte prédominance (avec une fréquence supérieure à 80 %) de la séquence d'ITS associée à E. alphitoides. Les isolats présentant la même séquence d'ITS qu'E. quercicola, espèce récemment décrite et encore non mentionnée en Europe, ont également été retrouvés dans toutes les régions françaises à une fréquence importante (15 % en moyenne pour l'échantillonnage...
Exotic pathogens cause severe damage in natural populations in the absence of coevolutionary dynamics with their hosts. However, some resistance to such pathogens may occur in naive populations. The objective of this study was to investigate the genetics of this so-called 'exapted' resistance to two pathogens of Asian origin (Erysiphe alphitoides and Phytophthora cinnamomi) in European oak.Host-pathogen compatibility was assessed by recording infection success and pathogen growth in a full-sib family of Quercus robur under controlled and natural conditions. Two high-resolution genetic maps anchored on the reference genome were used to study the genetic architecture of resistance and to identify positional candidate genes.Two genomic regions, each containing six strong and stable quantitative trait loci (QTLs) accounting for 12-19% of the phenotypic variation, were mainly associated with E. alphitoides infection. Candidate genes, especially genes encoding receptor-like-kinases and galactinol synthases, were identified in these regions. The three QTLs associated with P. cinnamomi infection did not colocate with QTLs found for E. alphitoides.These findings provide evidence that exapted resistance to E. alphitoides and P. cinnamomi is present in Q. robur and suggest that the underlying molecular mechanisms involve genes encoding proteins with extracellular signaling functions.
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