Phyllosticta paracitricarpa is synonymous with the EU quarantine fungus P. Citricarpa based on phylogenomic analyses

Valerie A van Ingen-Buijs, Anouk C van Westerhoven, Petros Skiadas, Xander C L Zuijdgeest, Sajeet Haridas, Christopher Daum, Kecia Duffy, Jie Guo, Hope Hundley, Kurt LaButti, Anna Lipzen, Jasmyn Pangilinan, Robert Riley, Jie Wang, Mi Yan, Francis Martin, Kerrie Barry, Igor V Grigoriev, Johannes Z Groenewald, Pedro W CrousMichael F Seidl*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Phyllosticta citricarpa is an important citrus-pathogen and a quarantine organism in the European Union. Its recently described relative, P. paracitricarpa, is very closely related and not listed as a quarantine organism. P. paracitricarpa is very difficult to distinguish from P. citricarpa, since its morphological features overlap and the barcoding gene sequences that were originally used to delimit them as distinct species have a low number of species-specific polymorphisms that have subsequently been shown to overlap between the two clades. Therefore, we performed extensive genomic analyses to determine whether the genetic variation between P. citricarpa and P. paracitricarpa strains should be considered to represent infraspecific variation within P. citricarpa, or whether it is indicative of distinct species. Using a phylogenomic analysis with 3,000 single copy ortholog genes and whole-genome comparisons, we determined that the variation between P. citricarpa and P. paracitricarpa can be considered as infraspecies variation within P. citricarpa. We also determined the level of variation in mitochondrial assemblies of several Phyllosticta species and concluded there are only minimal differences between the assemblies of P. citricarpa and P. paracitricarpa. Thus, using several orthogonal approaches, we here demonstrate that variation within the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes of other Phyllosticta species is larger than variation between genomes obtained from P. citricarpa and P. paracitricarpa strains. Thus, P. citricarpa and P. paracitricarpa should be considered as conspecific.

Original languageEnglish
Article number103925
JournalFungal Genetics and Biology
Volume175
Early online date5 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 5 Sept 2024

Keywords

  • Citrus black spot
  • Comparative genomics
  • Fungal taxonomy
  • Phyllosticta citricarpa
  • Phyllosticta paracitricarpa
  • Quarantine plant pathogen

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