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07 November 2019 | Story Leonie Bolleurs | Photo Johan Roux
Prof Zakkie Pretorius
Prof Zakkie Pretorius, Research Fellow at the UFS Department of Plant Sciences.

Prof Zakkie Pretorius, Research Fellow, and Prof Botma Visser, Associate Professor, both from the Department of Plant Sciences at the University of the Free State (UFS), partnered in a ground-breaking research project headed by Dr Melania Figueroa from the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Australia. Together, these scientists solved a 20-year-old mystery, uncovering the origins of one of the world’s deadliest strains of cereal rust disease.

The manuscript, with the title, Emergence of the Ug99 lineage of the wheat stem rust pathogen through somatic hybridisation, was accepted for publication in Nature Communications.

According to a statement released by CSIRO, research shows that the devastating Ug99 strain of the wheat stem-rust fungus was not the result of a sexual cross between different rust strains as previously thought, but in fact was created when fungal strands simply fused to create a new hybrid strain.

This process is called somatic hybridisation and enables fungi to merge their cells and exchange genetic material without going through a complex sexual reproduction cycle. The study found that half of Ug99’s genetic material came from a strain that occurred in Southern Africa around 100 years ago and eventually spread to Australia.

The discovery implies that other crop-destroying rust strains could hybridise elsewhere with Ug99, for example, to exchange genetic material and create a whole new enemy.

While there was some speculation that rust strains could hybridise – based on laboratory studies in the 1960s as well as some earlier studies on the topic – this comprehensive research now provided the first genomic evidence that the process can generate new strains.

History of Ug99

Prof Pretorius was the first person to describe the dangerous Ug99 isolate, confirming the ability of the isolate to leave the Sr31 resistance gene ineffective (up to that time, effective against all known wheat stem-rust races). This laid the basis for international concern.

He named the field sample Ug99, based on the country of origin (Uganda) and year of sample collection (1999). 

“The Sr31 resistance gene and associated traits were so effective that the gene occurred in almost 70% of CIMMYT’s (Mexican-based International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center) spring wheat germplasm. In addition, many popular cultivars containing the gene were released around the world.”

“Ug99 then disappeared for a few years. When the race re-appeared in East Africa, it caused localised but severe epidemics,” he said.

Prof Pretorius continues: “Leading wheat breeders and pathologists were concerned that Ug99 could destroy wheat production in many global regions where wheat is critical for food security. Thus, in 2005, Dr Norman Borlaug, Nobel laureate and father of the green revolution, called for a meeting in Kenya where a global effort to combat the threat was initiated. The international wheat research community was mobilised and with funding primarily from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and coordinated by Cornell University in the USA, research commenced.”

wheat stem rust

Wheat stem rust 14: Rust diseases are the cause of extensive crop losses each year. With this recent discovery, published in 
Nature Communications, scientists can now better identify the resistance genes which can be bred into wheat varieties to give crops 
long-lasting protection against rust. (Photo: Supplied) 

“From field trials in Kenya, it soon became apparent that 90% of the world’s wheat varieties were susceptible to Ug99. Although breeding and selection for resistance started in earnest, the pathogen adapted, gaining virulence for other previously effective resistance genes. At present, 13 races have been described within the Ug99 group occurring in 13 countries, mostly in Africa, but also in Yemen and Iran. Five of these races are present in South Africa, all confirmed by scientists from the UFS and ARC-Small Grain in Bethlehem. The original Ug99 has, however, never been detected in South Africa.”

Combined efforts

Rusts are common fungal diseases of plants. The spores of the fungus attach themselves to the stems and leaves of wheat plants and essentially suck the nutrients from the plant. Plants either die or produce shrivelled and low-quality grain. 

Group Leader at CSIRO, Dr Melania Figueroa, agrees that Ug99 is considered the most threatening of all rusts, as it has managed to overcome most stem rust-resistance genes used in wheat varieties.

“There is some good news, however; the better you know your enemy, the more equipped you are to fight against it. Knowing how these pathogens come about means we can better predict how they are likely to change in the future and better determine which resistance genes can be bred into wheat varieties to give long-lasting protection.”

Earlier this year, CSIRO worked with the University of Minnesota and the 2Blades Foundation to improve wheat resistance by stacking five resistance genes into the one wheat plant to combat wheat stem rust. 

The breakthrough came as Dr Figueroa’s group was sequencing Ug99 (then at the University of Minnesota), and at the same time a CSIRO team led by Dr Peter Dodds was sequencing Pgt21 in Australia (Pgt21 is a rust strain that was first seen in South Africa in the 1920s and believed to have been carried to Australia in the 1950s by wind currents). When the two groups compared results, they found that the two pathogens share an almost identical nucleus and therefore half of their DNA.

“This discovery will make it possible to develop better methods to screen for varieties with strong resistance to disease,” said Dr Figueroa.

Molecular fingerprinting

In addition to infection studies, molecular fingerprinting by members of the South African Ug99 race group led by Prof Botma Visser at the UFS, confirmed their genetic placement in context with Ug99 and other global stem rust races. The availability of the original Ug99 collection, along with other local rust isolates in long-term storage at the UFS, was essential to the success of the current research.

Despite the continued evolution of stem-rust variants, excellent progress has been made worldwide in the breeding of resistant wheat cultivars, including in South Africa. With funding from the Winter Cereal Trust, Dr Willem Boshoff, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Plant Sciences at the UFS, is responsible for the annual testing of all commercial wheat cultivars and advanced breeding lines for appropriate stem rust races.

Dr Melania Figueroa
Dr Melania Figueroa from the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO). Photo: Kate Langford

News Archive

UFS praised for hosting international research development programme
2013-03-05

 

At the farewell function were, from the left: Dr GansenPillay (deputy executive officer of the NRF), Emile Goofo (Cameroon), his son Tylio in the arms of Prof Nicky Morgan (Vice-Rector: Operations), Avelino Mondhane from Stockholm University (originally from Mozambique) and Prof Neil Heideman (Dean of the Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences).
Photo: Leatitia Pienaar
05 March 2013

“I must congratulate the University of the Free State on doing something like this,” Dr Gansen Pillay said at the farewell function for the participants in the Southern African Young Scientists Summer Programme (SA-YSSP) at the UFS.

The 19 young scientists from 16 countries completed their three-month programme at the end of February 2013. As another step in the process the participants must write articles for reputable journals and complete their doctoral studies. Their performance in the research world will also be tracked.

Dr Pillay, deputy executive officer of the National Research Foundation (NRF), said an investment was made in the researchers to secure the future of the programme. A lot of persuasion and proof was necessary to convince the Austrian Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) that a programme of this nature could be presented in Africa.

The SA-YSSP was hosted and managed by the UFS. The programme was developed by the NRF in collaboration with the Department of Science and Technology (DST) and IIASA into a novel and innovative initiative.  The official launch was by the Minister of Science and Technology during November 2011.

The SA-YSSP will be an annual three-month education, academic training and research capacity-building programme. Aligned with the YSSP model, annually presented in Austria, the SA-YSSP offered scientific seminars covering themes in the social and natural sciences, often with policy dimensions, to broaden the participants’ perspectives and strengthen their analytical and modelling skills, further enriching a demanding academic and research programme.

Prof Martin Mtwaeaborwa, SA-YSSP deputy dean, said the academic performance of the young scientists superseded the expectations. “I hope the scholars will look back at the programme as the moment their careers began.”

The added, “The UFS received positive remarks for organising the programme and we hope to get it again in future.”

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