Avirulence on Ve1 is a protein first described from the fungal plant-pathogen, Verticillium dahliae, and is encoded by the Ave1 gene.[1] The presence of Ave1 in an isolate of Verticillium dahliae conveys an avirulence phenotype when infecting a Tomato host that possesses the R-gene Ve1.
Orthologs of Ave1 have been identified in a number of plant pathogenic fungi.
Gene Name | Accession | Organism | Isolate | |
---|---|---|---|---|
VdAve1 | JN616379 | Verticillium dahliae | VdLs17 | |
VdAve1 | JQ625338 | Verticillium dahliae | Ls16 | |
VdAve1 | JQ625339 | Verticillium dahliae | CBS381.66 | |
VdAve1 | JQ625340 | Verticillium dahliae | JR2 | |
VdAve1 | JQ625341 | Verticillium dahliae | Vd14.01 | |
FoAve1 | JQ283440 | Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. lycopersici | Fol4287 | |
ChAve1 | JQ283439 | Colletotrichum higginsianum | ||
CbAve1 | JQ583777 | Cercospora beticola |