Publication | Open Access
Origin and Evolution of the Kiwifruit Canker Pandemic
128
Citations
65
References
2017
Year
BiologyPseudomonas Syringae PvPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyMolecular EpidemiologyComparative GenomicsSequenced Psa GenomesEntomologyEvolutionary BiologyKiwifruit Canker PandemicNew ZealandNatural SciencesDisease ControlDisease EcologyPhylogenomicsGenomicsMicrobiologyMedicine
Recurring epidemics of kiwifruit (Actinidia spp.) bleeding canker disease are caused by Pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae (Psa). In order to strengthen understanding of population structure, phylogeography, and evolutionary dynamics, we isolated Pseudomonas from cultivated and wild kiwifruit across six provinces in China. Based on the analysis of 80 sequenced Psa genomes, we show that China is the origin of the pandemic lineage but that strain diversity in China is confined to just a single clade. In contrast, Korea and Japan harbor strains from multiple clades. Distinct independent transmission events marked introduction of the pandemic lineage into New Zealand, Chile, Europe, Korea, and Japan. Despite high similarity within the core genome and minimal impact of within-clade recombination, we observed extensive variation even within the single clade from which the global pandemic arose.
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