Revisiting the Concept of Host Range of Plant Pathogens

Annu Rev Phytopathol. 2019 Aug 25:57:63-90. doi: 10.1146/annurev-phyto-082718-100034. Epub 2019 May 13.

Abstract

Strategies to manage plant disease-from use of resistant varieties to crop rotation, elimination of reservoirs, landscape planning, surveillance, quarantine, risk modeling, and anticipation of disease emergences-all rely on knowledge of pathogen host range. However, awareness of the multitude of factors that influence the outcome of plant-microorganism interactions, the spatial and temporal dynamics of these factors, and the diversity of any given pathogen makes it increasingly challenging to define simple, all-purpose rules to circumscribe the host range of a pathogen. For bacteria, fungi, oomycetes, and viruses, we illustrate that host range is often an overlapping continuum-more so than the separation of discrete pathotypes-and that host jumps are common. By setting the mechanisms of plant-pathogen interactions into the scales of contemporary land use and Earth history, we propose a framework to assess the frontiers of host range for practical applications and research on pathogen evolution.

Keywords: cophylogeny; evolutionary history; generalism; host jump; host specialization; network analysis.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Fungi
  • Host Specificity*
  • Host-Pathogen Interactions
  • Oomycetes*
  • Plant Diseases
  • Plants