Phylogenomic Taxonomic Analysis of Ralstonia solanacearum Strains causing Bacterial Wilt Disease in Northeastern Argentina.

Avatar
Poster
Voice is AI-generated
Connected to paperThis paper is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review

Phylogenomic Taxonomic Analysis of Ralstonia solanacearum Strains causing Bacterial Wilt Disease in Northeastern Argentina.

Authors

Obregon, V.; Shin, G. Y.; Galdeano, E.; Escobar, R.; Lattar, T.; Ibanez, J. M.; Amadio, A.; Irazoqui, J. M.; Santiago, G. M.; Eberhardt, M. F.; Gochez, A. M.; Lowe-Power, T.

Abstract

Ralstonia solanacearum species complex (RSSC) is a genetically diverse group of plant pathogens, yet genomic data from South America remain limited. Here, we characterize 13 RSSC strains isolated from tomato, pepper, and eggplant in northeastern Argentina. Phylogenetic analysis of the egl marker gene assigned these strains to phylotype IIA and suggested two closely related lineages. Complete genomes (5.63 to 5.76 Mb) were generated for four representative strains, yielding high-quality (99.94% completeness with f_Burkholderiaceae CheckM markers), closed assemblies with canonical bipartite architecture. Phylogenetic analysis of the egl marker, 49 conserved bacterial genes, and average nucleotide identity (ANI) analyses, consistently assigned one lineage to sequevar IIA-50, forming a coherent and monophyletic group. In contrast, although egl analysis suggested the second lineage was related to one sequevar IIA-38 reference strain, genomic analysis did not support this assignment. Further, the genomic analysis revealed significant genomic distance between the genomes for two sequevar 38 representative strains, supporting a conclusion that sequevar 38 itself was not monophyletic and instead appears paraphyletic. These findings highlight limitations of single-locus classification and support genome-informed refinement of RSSC sub-phylotype taxonomy.

Follow Us on

0 comments

Add comment