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Deciphering the invasive history of a bacterial crop pathogen in the Southern Indian Ocean islands: insights from historical herbarium specimens

Campos P., Groot Crego C., Boyer K., Gaudeul M., Baider C., Pruvost O., Gagnevin L., Becker N., Rieux A.. 2019. In : Flores Olivier (ed.), Ah-Peng Claudine (ed.), Wilding Nicholas (ed.). Book of abstracts posters of the third international conference on Island ecology, evolution and conservation. Saint-Denis : Université de la Réunion, p. 325-325. International conference on Island ecology, evolution and conservation. 3, 2019-07-08/2019-07-13, Saint-Denis (Réunion).

Crop pathogens have been a threat to human kind since the birth of agriculture. However, little is known on the evolutionary processes and ecological factors that underlie their emergence and success, and explain epidemics. Insular ecosystems are especially vulnerable to exotic disease invasions and thus provide a model of particular interest. Nowadays, our understanding of plant pathogens and the diseases they cause greatly bene¿ts from molecular genetics and genomics. In this context, herbarium collections are an enormous source of dated, identi¿ed and preserved DNA material that can be used in comparative genomic and phylogeographic studies to elucidate the emergence and evolutionary his-tory of pathogens. In this study, we reconstructed the genomes of 6 historical strains of the Citrus phytopathogen Xanthomonas citri pv. citri ( Xcc) obtained from infected herbarium specimens. We designed a speci¿c extraction protocol suited for bacterial ancient DNA (aDNA) from herbarium spec-imens, and showed the authenticity of our historical samples by assessing DNA damage patterns. We then compared the historical strains to a large set of modern genomes to reconstruct their phylogenetic relationship and estimate several evolutionary parameters at the scale of the Southern Indian Ocean (SIO) islands, using Bayesian tip-calibration inferences. Our results ¿rst con¿rm that Xcc originated in Asia and subsequently spread to the rest of the world, including the SIO islands. We dated the arrival of Xcc in the SIO area to the mid-19th century and hypothesize that it was linked to human migrations following the abolishment of slavery. By analysing the phylogenetic structure of SIO Xcc we suggest that the introduction of the disease happened ¿rst in La R´eunion and Mauritius, from which it spread to all other SIO islands. Finally, our results also include the ¿rst estimation of a mutation rate for a plant pathogenic bacterium. Our study shows the great potential hidden in herbarium c

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