Mapping the adaptive landscape of a major agricultural pathogen reveals evolutionary constraints across heterogeneous environments

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Abstract

The adaptive potential of pathogens in novel or heterogeneous environments underpins the risk of disease epidemics. Antagonistic pleiotropy or differential resource allocation among life-history traits can constrain pathogen adaptation. However, we lack understanding how the genetic architecture of individual traits can generate trade-offs. Here, we report a large-scale study based on 145 global strains of the fungal wheat pathogen Zymoseptoria tritici from four continents. We measured 50 life-history traits, including virulence and reproduction on 12 different wheat hosts and growth responses to several abiotic stressors. To elucidate the genetic basis of adaptation, we used multi-trait genome-wide association mapping. We show that most traits are governed by polygenic architectures and are highly heritable suggesting that adaptation proceeds mainly through allele frequency shifts at many loci. We identified numerous pleiotropic SNPs with conflicting effects on host colonization and survival in stressful environments. Such genetic constraints are likely limiting the pathogen’s ability to cause host damage and could be exploited for pathogen control. In contrast, adaptation to abiotic stress factors was likely facilitated by synergistic pleiotropy. Our study illustrates how comprehensive mapping of life-history trait architectures across diverse environments allows to predict evolutionary trajectories of pathogens confronted with environmental perturbations.

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last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00