Population structure and diversity of the needle pathogen Dothistroma pini suggests human-mediated movement in Europe

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Authors

Van der Nest, Ariska
Wingfield, Michael J.
Sadikovic, Dusan
Mullett, Martin S.
Marcais, Benoit
Queloz, Valentin
Adamcikova, Katarina
Davydenko, Kateryna
Barnes, Irene

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Frontiers Media

Abstract

Dothistroma needle blight (DNB) is an important disease of Pinus species that can be caused by one of two distinct but closely related pathogens; Dothistroma septosporum and Dothistroma pini. Dothistroma septosporum has a wide geographic distribution and is relatively well-known. In contrast, D. pini is known only from the United States and Europe, and there is a distinct lack of knowledge regarding its population structure and genetic diversity. The recent development of 16 microsatellite markers for D. pini provided an opportunity to investigate the diversity, structure, and mode of reproduction for populations collected over a period of 12 years, on eight different hosts in Europe. In total, 345 isolates from Belgium, the Czech Republic, France, Hungary, Romania, Western Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, and Ukraine were screened using microsatellite and species-specific mating type markers. A total of 109 unique multilocus haplotypes were identified and structure analyses suggested that the populations are influenced by location rather than host species. Populations from France and Spain displayed the highest levels of genetic diversity followed by the population in Ukraine. Both mating types were detected in most countries, with the exception of Hungary, Russia and Slovenia. Evidence for sexual recombination was supported only in the population from Spain. The observed population structure and several shared haplotypes between non-bordering countries provides good evidence that the movement of D. pini in Europe has been strongly influenced by human activity in Europe.

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DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : The authors acknowledge that the data presented in this study must be deposited and made publicly available in an acceptable repository, prior to publication. Frontiers cannot accept a manuscript that does not adhere to our open data policies.

Keywords

Dothistroma pini, Microsatellites, Mating types, Pine needle pathogen, Mycosphaerella pini, Red band needle blight, Dothistroma needle blight (DNB), SDG-15: Life on land

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-15:Life on land

Citation

Van der Nest, A., Wingfield, M.J., Sadikovic, D., Mullett, M.S., Marcais, B., Queloz, V., Adamcikova, K., Davydenko, K. & Barnes, I. (2023), Population structure and diversity of the needle pathogen Dothistroma pini suggests human-mediated movement in Europe. Frontiers in Genetics 4:1103331. DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2023.1103331.