Abstract
Intracellular plant defense against pathogens is mediated by a class of
disease resistance genes known as NB-LRRs or NLRs (R genes). Many of the
diseases these genes protect against are more prevalent in regions of
higher rainfall, which provide better growth conditions for the
pathogens. As such, we expect a higher selective pressure for the
maintenance and proliferation of R genes in plants adapted to wetter
conditions. In this study, we enriched libraries for R genes using
RenSeq from baits primarily developed from the common sunflower
(Helianthus annuus) reference genome. We sequenced the R gene libraries
of Silphium integrifolium Michx, a perennial relative of sunflower, from
12 prairie remnants across a rainfall gradient in the Central Plains of
the United States, with both Illumina short-read (n=99) and PacBio
long-read (n=10) approaches. We found a positive relationship between
the mean effective annual precipitation of a plant’s source prairie
remnant and the number of R genes in its genome, consistent with
intensity of plant pathogen coevolution increasing with precipitation.
We show that RenSeq can be applied to the study of ecological hypotheses
in non-model relatives of model organisms.