Pathogenic Factors and Mechanisms of the Alternaria Leaf Spot Pathogen in Apple

被引:8
作者
Cao, Chen [1 ]
Gong, Shun [1 ]
Li, Yan [1 ]
Tang, Jinqi [1 ]
Li, Tianzhong [1 ]
Zhang, Qiulei [1 ]
机构
[1] China Agr Univ, Lab Fruit Cell & Mol Breeding, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
apple; Alternaria leaf spot; mycotoxin; pathogenicity; effectors; BLOTCH; MALI; PATHOTYPE; SUSCEPTIBILITY; TOXINS; GENE;
D O I
10.3390/horticulturae10030212
中图分类号
S6 [园艺];
学科分类号
0902 ;
摘要
Alternaria leaf spot seriously threatens the sustainable development of the global apple industry, causing significant losses and reducing fruit quality and yield. The causal agent Alternaria alternata f. sp. mali (Alternaria mali, ALT) produces various molecules to modulate infection, such as cell wall-degrading enzymes, toxins, and elicitor-like molecules. ALT produces the host-specific AM-toxin, an important pathogenicity factor. ALT also releases effectors into apple cells that modify host defense, but these proteins have not yet been described. Here, we identified the pathogenic fungal types responsible for early defoliation from diseased leaves of Fuji (Malus domestica cv. 'Fuji') apple collected from five districts in Shandong Province, China. The ALT isolates ALT2 to ALT7 were pathogenic to four apple cultivars, with ALT7 being the most aggressive. We extracted mycotoxins (AM-toxin-2 to AM-toxin-7) from each isolate and used them to treat different apple varieties, which led to leaf-spot symptoms and damaged chloroplasts and nuclear membranes, followed by cell death. AM-toxin-7 produced the most severe symptoms, but chloroplasts remained intact when the mycotoxin was inactivated. Mass spectrometry identified 134 secretory proteins in ALT7 exosomes, and three secreted proteins (AltABC, AltAO, and AltPDE) were confirmed to be involved in apple pathogenesis. Therefore, ALT secretes AM-toxin and secretory proteins as an infection strategy to promote fungal invasion and overcome the host defense system.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 35 条
[1]   Evaluation of apple genotypes and Malus species for resistance to Alternaria blotch caused by Alternaria alternata apple pathotype using detached-leaf method [J].
Abe, K. ;
Iwanami, H. ;
Kotoda, N. ;
Moriya, S. ;
Takahashi , S. .
PLANT BREEDING, 2010, 129 (02) :208-218
[2]   Revisiting Alternaria-host interactions: New insights on its pathogenesis, defense mechanisms and control strategies [J].
Ali, Sajad ;
Tyagi, Anshika ;
Rajarammohan, Sivasubramanian ;
Mir, Zahoor A. ;
Bae, Hanhong .
SCIENTIA HORTICULTURAE, 2023, 322
[3]   Ulvan effect on conidial germination and appressoria formation of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides [J].
Araujo, Leonardo ;
Goncalves, Amanda E. ;
Stadnik, Marciel J. .
PHYTOPARASITICA, 2014, 42 (05) :631-640
[4]   A review of fungal phytotoxins: from basic studies to practical use [J].
Berestetskiy, A. O. .
APPLIED BIOCHEMISTRY AND MICROBIOLOGY, 2008, 44 (05) :453-465
[5]   Stress Response and Pathogenicity of the Necrotrophic Fungal Pathogen Alternaria alternata [J].
Chung, Kuang-Ren .
SCIENTIFICA, 2012, 2012
[6]   Alternaria malicola sp nov., a New Pathogen Causing Fruit Spot on Apple in China [J].
Dang, J. L. ;
Gleason, M. L. ;
Li, L. N. ;
Wang, C. ;
Niu, C. K. ;
Zhang, R. ;
Sun, G. Y. .
PLANT DISEASE, 2018, 102 (07) :1273-1282
[7]   Effects of Fungicides and Spray Application Interval on Controlling Marssonina Blotch of Apple in the Loess Plateau Region of China [J].
Dang, J. L. ;
Gleason, M. L. ;
Niu, C. K. ;
Liu, X. ;
Guo, Y. Z. ;
Zhang, R. ;
Sun, G. Y. .
PLANT DISEASE, 2017, 101 (04) :568-575
[8]   Plant pathogens and integrated defence responses to infection [J].
Dangl, JL ;
Jones, JDG .
NATURE, 2001, 411 (6839) :826-833
[9]   INFLUENCE OF TEMPERATURE AND WETNESS DURATION ON INFECTION OF APPLE LEAVES AND VIRULENCE OF DIFFERENT ISOLATES OF ALTERNARIA-MALI [J].
FILAJDIC, N ;
SUTTON, TB .
PHYTOPATHOLOGY, 1992, 82 (11) :1279-1283
[10]   IDENTIFICATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF ALTERNARIA-MALI ON APPLES IN NORTH-CAROLINA AND SUSCEPTIBILITY OF DIFFERENT VARIETIES OF APPLES TO ALTERNARIA BLOTCH [J].
FILAJDIC, N ;
SUTTON, TB .
PLANT DISEASE, 1991, 75 (10) :1045-1048