The increased emergence of cereal stem rust in southern and western Europe,
caused by the pathogen Puccinia graminis, and the prevalence of alternate (sexual)
host, Berberis species, have regained attention as the sexual host may serve as source
of novel pathogen variability that may pose a threat to cereal supply. The main
objective of the present study was to investigate the functional role of Berberis
species in the current epidemiological situation of cereal stemrust in Europe. Surveys
in 11 European countrieswere carried out from 2018 to 2020, where aecial infections
from five barberry species were collected. Phylogenetic analysis of 121 single aecial
clusters of diverse origin using the elongation factor 1-α gene indicated the presence
of different special forms (aka formae speciales) of P. graminis adapted to different
cereal and grass species. Inoculation studies using aecial clusters from Spain,
United Kingdom, and Switzerland resulted in 533 stem rust isolates sampled from
wheat, barley, rye, and oat, which confirmed the presence of multiple special forms
of P. graminis. Microsatellite marker analysis of a subset of 192 sexually-derived
isolates recovered on wheat, barley and rye from the three populations confirmed
the generation of novel genetic diversity revealed by the detection of 135multilocus
genotypes. Discriminant analysis of principal components resulted in four genetic
clusters, which grouped at both local and country level. Here, we demonstrated that
a variety of Berberis species may serve as functional alternate hosts for cereal stem
rust fungi and highlights the increased risks that the sexual cycle may pose to cereal
production in Europe, which calls for new initiatives within rust surveillance,
epidemiological research and resistance breeding.