TY - JOUR
T1 - A Chromosome-Scale Genome Assembly of the Flax Rust Fungus Reveals the Two Unusually Large Effector Proteins, AvrM3 and AvrN
AU - Sperschneider, Jana
AU - Chen, Jian
AU - Anderson, Claire
AU - Morin, Emmanuelle
AU - Zhang, Xiaoxiao
AU - Lewis, David
AU - Henningsen, Eva
AU - Grigoriev, Igor V.
AU - Rathjen, John P.
AU - Jones, David A.
AU - Duplessis, Sebastien
AU - Dodds, Peter N.
N1 - © 2025 The Author(s).
PY - 2025/10
Y1 - 2025/10
N2 - Rust fungi comprise thousands of species, many of which cause disease on important crop plants. The flax rust fungus Melampsora lini has been a model species for the genetic dissection of plant immunity since the 1940s; however, the highly fragmented and incomplete reference genome has so far hindered progress in effector gene discovery. Here, we generated a fully phased, chromosome-scale assembly of the two nuclear genomes of M. lini strain CH5, resolving an additional 320 Mbp of the sequence. The 482-Mbp dikaryotic genome is at least 79% repetitive, with a large proportion (approximately 40%) of the genome comprising young, highly similar transposable elements. The assembly resolves the known effector gene loci, some of which carry complex duplications that were collapsed in the previous assembly. Using a genetic map followed bymanual correction of gene models, we identified the AvrM3 and AvrN genes, which encode unusually large fungal effector proteins and trigger defense responses when co-expressed with the corresponding resistance genes.We located the genes linked to the tetrapolar mating system on chromosomes 4 and 9, but in contrast to the cereal rusts that have one pheromone receptor gene per haplotype, in flax rust, three pheromone receptor genes were found, with two of them closely linked on one haplotype. Taken together, we show that a high-quality assembly is crucial for resolving complex gene loci, and given the increasing number of fungal effectors of large size, the commonly applied criterion for effector candidates of being small proteins needs to be reconsidered.
AB - Rust fungi comprise thousands of species, many of which cause disease on important crop plants. The flax rust fungus Melampsora lini has been a model species for the genetic dissection of plant immunity since the 1940s; however, the highly fragmented and incomplete reference genome has so far hindered progress in effector gene discovery. Here, we generated a fully phased, chromosome-scale assembly of the two nuclear genomes of M. lini strain CH5, resolving an additional 320 Mbp of the sequence. The 482-Mbp dikaryotic genome is at least 79% repetitive, with a large proportion (approximately 40%) of the genome comprising young, highly similar transposable elements. The assembly resolves the known effector gene loci, some of which carry complex duplications that were collapsed in the previous assembly. Using a genetic map followed bymanual correction of gene models, we identified the AvrM3 and AvrN genes, which encode unusually large fungal effector proteins and trigger defense responses when co-expressed with the corresponding resistance genes.We located the genes linked to the tetrapolar mating system on chromosomes 4 and 9, but in contrast to the cereal rusts that have one pheromone receptor gene per haplotype, in flax rust, three pheromone receptor genes were found, with two of them closely linked on one haplotype. Taken together, we show that a high-quality assembly is crucial for resolving complex gene loci, and given the increasing number of fungal effectors of large size, the commonly applied criterion for effector candidates of being small proteins needs to be reconsidered.
KW - fungal effectors
KW - genome assembly
KW - Melampsora
KW - rust fungi
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105020087902
U2 - 10.1094/MPMI-04-25-0047-R
DO - 10.1094/MPMI-04-25-0047-R
M3 - Article
C2 - 40435161
AN - SCOPUS:105020087902
SN - 0894-0282
VL - 38
SP - 677
EP - 688
JO - Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions
JF - Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions
IS - 5
ER -