A structurally unique effector shared between Verticillium dahliae and Fusarium oxysporum is involved in cotton defoliation and virulence on other hosts
Doddi, A.; Lorencini Fiorin, G.; Li, J.; Zannini, I.; Sato, Y.; Lancia, G.; Giuliari, G.; Gomez-Lama Cabanas, C.; Valverde-Corredor, A.; Liu, T.; Tian, H.; van den Berg, G.; Mercado-Blanco, J.; Zhang, B.; Seidl, M. F.; Rep, M.; Groot, W.; Bonaccorsi Di Patti, M. C.; Troilo, F.; Di Matteo, A.; Giardina, G.; Reverberi, M.; Zhu, L.; Faino, L.; Thomma, B.
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Defoliating (D) strains of the vascular wilt fungus Verticillium dahliae cause severe yield losses in cotton and olive worldwide, yet the genetic basis underlying this pathotype has remained unknown. Here, we combined comparative genomics, functional genetics, structural analysis, and phylogenomics to uncover the molecular determinant of defoliation. We identified a small, D pathotype-specific genomic region encoding two duplicated secreted effector genes. Simultaneous deletion of both gene copies abolished pathogenicity and defoliation in cotton, olive, Nicotiana benthamiana, and Arabidopsis thaliana, whereas single deletions reduced virulence and genetic complementation restored disease symptoms. Conversely, expression of the D effector in non-defoliating strains was sufficient to induce defoliation. Moreover, or exogenous application of the purified protein, induced wilting and defoliation as well. Structural analyses revealed that D homologs share a conserved but previously uncharacterized protein fold and are distributed across Verticillium and Fusarium species, exhibiting functional diversification and host-specific activity. Phylogenomic and genomic context analyses indicate repeated horizontal transfer events mediated by giant transposable elements known as Starships. Together, our findings identify the D effector as a central pathogenicity factor that drives defoliation and virulence, and demonstrate how Starship-mediated horizontal gene transfer shapes the emergence and dissemination of an agriculturally devastating fungal trait.
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