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Conserved secreted effectors contribute to endophytic growth and multihost plant compatibility in a vascular wilt fungus

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Conserved secreted effectors contribute to endophytic growth and multihost plant compatibility in a vascular wilt fungus.pdf (7.976Mb)
Author
Redkar, Amey
Sabale, Mugdha
Schudoma, Christian
Zechmann, Bernd
Gupta, Yogesh K.
Sánchez López-Berges, M.
Venturini, Giovanni
Giménez-Ibañez, Selena
Turrà, David
Solano, Roberto
Di Pietro, Antonio
Publisher
Oxford Academic
Date
2022
Subject
Ecosystem
Fusarium
Lycopersicon esculentum
Plant Diseases
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Abstract
Fungal interactions with plant roots, either beneficial or detrimental, have a crucial impact on agriculture and ecosystems. The cosmopolitan plant pathogen Fusarium oxysporum (Fo) provokes vascular wilts in more than a hundred different crops. Isolates of this fungus exhibit host-specific pathogenicity, which is conferred by lineage-specific Secreted In Xylem (SIX) effectors encoded on accessory genomic regions. However, such isolates also can colonize the roots of other plants asymptomatically as endophytes or even protect them against pathogenic strains. The molecular determinants of endophytic multihost compatibility are largely unknown. Here, we characterized a set of Fo candidate effectors from tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) root apoplastic fluid; these early root colonization (ERC) effectors are secreted during early biotrophic growth on main and alternative plant hosts. In contrast to SIX effectors, ERCs have homologs across the entire Fo species complex as well as in other plant-interacting fungi, suggesting a conserved role in fungus–plant associations. Targeted deletion of ERC genes in a pathogenic Fo isolate resulted in reduced virulence and rapid activation of plant immune responses, while ERC deletion in a nonpathogenic isolate led to impaired root colonization and biocontrol ability. Strikingly, some ERCs contribute to Fo infection on the nonvascular land plant Marchantia polymorpha, revealing an evolutionarily conserved mechanism for multihost colonization by root infecting fungi.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10396/30217
Fuente
Amey Redkar, Mugdha Sabale, Christian Schudoma, Bernd Zechmann, Yogesh K Gupta, Manuel S López-Berges, Giovanni Venturini, Selena Gimenez-Ibanez, David Turrà, Roberto Solano, Antonio Di Pietro, Conserved secreted effectors contribute to endophytic growth and multihost plant compatibility in a vascular wilt fungus, The Plant Cell, Volume 34, Issue 9, September 2022, Pages 3214–3232, https://doi.org/10.1093/plcell/koac174
Versión del Editor
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/plcell/koac174
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