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Is there a trade-off between host generalism and aggressiveness across pathogen populations? A synthesis of the global potato and tomato blight lesion growth data

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Abstract

Phytophthora infestans populations and lineages vary widely in their specificity to potato and tomato hosts, from specialisation to generalism. However, generalists that displace others and became dominant on both hosts are relatively uncommon. Generalists may have lower fitness compared to specialists on the host of the latter, which could explain their coexistence at many locations. Lesion size is an aggressiveness metric closely related to fitness in P. infestans. A trade-off between generalism and lesion growth rate on the original host can explain the variation among blight populations. I collated the data from cross-inoculation trials on potato and tomato isolates to test this trade-off. In addition, other metrics related to disease symptoms were included to test whether the degree of specificity is different between populations from potato and tomato, and to explore whether specificity had changed over time. The results indicate a trade-off between generalism and lesion growth rate where higher specificity was associated with significantly faster lesion growth on the original host at the population-level, but not at the lineage-level. Potato and tomato isolates were overall not significantly different in specificity, but tomato isolates tended towards generalism with time. These findings indicate that specialists may avoid displacement on their host by generalists through faster lesion growth, and help explain the common co-occurrence of generalists and specialists. However, a few invasive generalists can rapidly displace competitors and became dominant on both hosts across a broader region. It is likely that important exceptions exist to this trade-off.

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Acknowledgements

The author is grateful to the researchers whose data contributed to this synthesis, and thank the anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments. Special thanks go to Susan Rutherford for her support and help proofreading the manuscript and Edward Liew for the earlier discussions on Phytophthora infestans and for his advice. Justin SH Wan was supported by the Jiangsu University Science Foundation Fund (20JDG056).

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Correspondence to Justin S. H. Wan.

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The sole author declares there is no conflict of interest.

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Wan, J.S.H. Is there a trade-off between host generalism and aggressiveness across pathogen populations? A synthesis of the global potato and tomato blight lesion growth data. Eur J Plant Pathol 167, 25–39 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10658-023-02682-3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10658-023-02682-3

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