An open-access T-BAS phylogeny for emerging Phytophthora species

PLoS One. 2023 Apr 3;18(4):e0283540. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0283540. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Phytophthora species cause severe diseases on food, forest, and ornamental crops. Since the genus was described in 1876, it has expanded to comprise over 190 formally described species. There is a need for an open access phylogenetic tool that centralizes diverse streams of sequence data and metadata to facilitate research and identification of Phytophthora species. We used the Tree-Based Alignment Selector Toolkit (T-BAS) to develop a phylogeny of 192 formally described species and 33 informal taxa in the genus Phytophthora using sequences of eight nuclear genes. The phylogenetic tree was inferred using the RAxML maximum likelihood program. A search engine was also developed to identify microsatellite genotypes of P. infestans based on genetic distance to known lineages. The T-BAS tool provides a visualization framework allowing users to place unknown isolates on a curated phylogeny of all Phytophthora species. Critically, the tree can be updated in real-time as new species are described. The tool contains metadata including clade, host species, substrate, sexual characteristics, distribution, and reference literature, which can be visualized on the tree and downloaded for other uses. This phylogenetic resource will allow data sharing among research groups and the database will enable the global Phytophthora community to upload sequences and determine the phylogenetic placement of an isolate within the larger phylogeny and to download sequence data and metadata. The database will be curated by a community of Phytophthora researchers and housed on the T-BAS web portal in the Center for Integrated Fungal Research at NC State. The T-BAS web tool can be leveraged to create similar metadata enhanced phylogenies for other Oomycete, bacterial or fungal pathogens.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Genotype
  • Phylogeny
  • Phytophthora* / genetics

Grants and funding

Graduate assistantship of AC funded by National Science Foundation National Research Training Grant Award Number 1828820 (years 1,2), the USDA APHIS Plant Protection Act 7721 grant AP21PPQ&ST000020 and AP21PPQ&ST000062 in year 3. Senior author JBR was PI on USDA APHIS Plant Protection Act 7721 and Co-PI on NSF grant. ACS salary was funded by NC State Grip4PSI project. The funders had no role in the design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.