scholarly journals Comparative genomics of Verticillium dahliae isolates reveals the in planta-secreted effector protein recognized in V2 tomato plants

Author(s):  
Edgar A. Chavarro-Carrero ◽  
Jasper P. Vermeulen ◽  
David E. Torres ◽  
Toshiyuki Usami ◽  
Henk J. Schouten ◽  
...  

SUMMARYPlant pathogens secrete effector molecules during host invasion to promote host colonization. However, some of these effectors become recognized by host receptors, encoded by resistance genes, to mount defense response and establish immunity. Recently, a novel resistance was identified in tomato, mediated by the single dominant V2 locus, to control strains of the soil-borne vascular wilt fungus Verticillium dahliae that belong to race 2. We performed comparative genomics between race 2 strains and resistance-breaking race 3 strains to identify the avirulence effector that activates V2 resistance, termed Av2. We identified 277 kb of race 2-specific sequence comprising only two genes that encode predicted secreted proteins, both of which are expressed by V. dahliae during tomato colonization. Subsequent functional analysis based on genetic complementation into race 3 isolates confirmed that one of the two candidates encodes the avirulence effector Av2 that is recognized in V2 tomato plants. The identification of Av2 will not only be helpful to select tomato cultivars that are resistant to race 2 strains of V. dahliae, as the corresponding V2 resistance gene has not yet been mapped, but also to monitor adaptations in the V. dahliae population to deployment of V2-containing tomato cultivars in agriculture.

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anja Kombrink ◽  
Hanna Rovenich ◽  
Xiaoqian Shi-Kunne ◽  
Eduardo Rojas-Padilla ◽  
Grardy C.M. van den Berg ◽  
...  

SUMMARYChitin-binding LysM effectors contribute to virulence of various plant pathogenic fungi that are causal agents of foliar diseases. Here, we report on LysM effectors of the soil-borne fungal vascular wilt pathogen Verticillium dahliae. Comparative genomics revealed three core LysM effectors that are conserved in a collection of V. dahliae strains. Remarkably, and in contrast to the previously studied LysM effectors of other plant pathogens, no expression of core LysM effectors was monitored in planta in a taxonomically diverse panel of host plants. Moreover, targeted deletion of the individual LysM effector genes in V. dahliae strain JR2 did not compromise virulence in infections on Arabidopsis, tomato or Nicotiana benthamiana. Interestingly, an additional lineage-specific LysM effector is encoded in the genome of V. dahliae strain VdLs17 but not in any other V. dahliae strain sequenced to date. Remarkably, this lineage-specific effector is expressed in planta and contributes to virulence of V. dahliae strain VdLs17 on tomato, but not on Arabidopsis or on N. benthamiana. Functional analysis revealed that this LysM effector binds chitin, is able to suppress chitin-induced immune responses, and protects fungal hyphae against hydrolysis by plant hydrolytic enzymes. Thus, in contrast to the core LysM effectors of V. dahliae, this lineage-specific LysM effector of strain VdLs17 contributes to virulence in planta.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lugard Eboigbe

When Verticillium dahliae enters the host plant, the first line of defense that it encounters is the cell wall. Plant pathogenic fungi (including V. dahliae) produce extracellular enzymes which degrade plant cell wall components in a coordinated action. Some of the genes that encode these cell wall degrading enzymes, i.e., xylanases, cellulases and non-specific-action genes, were the major focus of this Ph.D. programme. Gene inactivation bears a remarkable model for the determination of the functions of genes in any organism. In this research, this molecular genetic tool has been applied to examine the functional role of β-1,6-endoglucanase and β-1,4-endoxylanase genes in the pathogenicity of filamentous fungus Verticillium dahliae. The gene coding for β-1,6-endoglucanase is considered as one of the important genes that code for hydrolyzing enzymes released at the initial stages of infection by fungi for the depolymerization of the cell wall. To address the hypothesis that these enzymes are important in V. dahliae virulence, a gene encoding a β-1,6-endoglucanase (vdg6) was isolated from V. dahliae using genome walking technique. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the 3’ and 5’ ends of clones from a genomic library of the fungus showed the presence of part of the endo-1,6-β-glucanase gene in a 3.5kb genomic fragment. Using this clone as probe and by employing genome walking approaches the 3’ and 5’; of the gene were determined bringing the entire gene (vdg6) size to ~1800 bp. An internal fragment (1.2kb) of vdg6 was used to disrupt the wild-type gene of the tomato race 2 V. dahliae strain 123V and the knock-out mutant (VdB) strain was tested for pathogenicity on tomato plants. The result showed a 7.5% reduction in disease symptoms caused on tomato plants in comparison with the wild type. Growth on minimal medium supplemented with different carbon sources showed reduced ability of the mutant to breakdown cellulose, whereas growth on glucose, pectin and sucrose were similar to the wild type. Endo-β-1,4-xylanase catalyze the endohydrolysis of xylan, the major structural polysaccharide of the plant cell wall. In order to investigate the role of the β-1,4-endoxylanase gene(xylA) in virulence of V. dahliae, through the analysis of clones from a genomic library of V. dahliae strain 76 and shotgun ESTs from xylem sap growing fungus the xylA gene was isolated. Its nucleotide sequence was determined and the predicted amino acid sequence showed significant homology with family 11 xylanases. The gene was disrupted by targeted inactivation due to a single cross-over event in a V. dahliae race 2 tomato strain. The knock-out mutant (XA) was compared with the wild type strain for disease symptoms on tomato plants. The result showed a small (7%) reduction in disease severity in the mutant strain. Growth of the mutant strain on minimal medium containing cellulose as the sole carbon source was reduced compared to the wild type indicating for a role of xylA in the breakdown of complex components of the cell wall. Other cell wall degrading genes cloned were β-1,3-exoglucanase, β-1,4-endoglucanse and endoglucanase II. The major obstacle to the determination of the genes involved in the depolymerisation of cell wall and pathogenicity is function redundancy. In an attempt to overcome the hurdle created by this function redundancy in analyzing the functions of the above genes, first, the regulation of vdg6 by sucrose non-fermenting gene (VdSNF1) was checked. The results showed that vdg6 gene is under catabolite repression, it is expressed during pathogencity and is important for the virulence of V. dahliae. Secondly, double disruption mutants were constructed from the single VdB mutant and the signalling PKA (cAMP-mediated protein kinase A) gene, namely VP1, VP2, VP3 and VP4. Analysis of these double mutants showed an obvious link between vdg6 gene and cAMP-mediated PKA (VdPKAC1) and that the β-1,6-endoglucanase cell wall degrading gene contributes to the pathogenicity of the fungus. In conclusion, all experimental evidence from this study showed that cell wall degrading genes contribute to virulence and pathogenicity of the fungus, however, since most of them belong to families of genes with similar functions the system is very complex to unravel and fully understand the genetic basis of pathogenicity.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jasper R.L. Depotter ◽  
Xiaoqian Shi-Kunne ◽  
Hélène Missonnier ◽  
Tingli Liu ◽  
Luigi Faino ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTSelection pressure impacts genomes unevenly, as different genes adapt with differential speed to establish an organism’s optimal fitness. Plant pathogens co-evolve with their hosts, which implies continuously adaption to evade host immunity. Effectors are secreted proteins that mediate immunity evasion, but may also typically become recognized by host immune receptors. To facilitate effector repertoire alterations, in many pathogens, effector genes reside in dynamic genomic regions that are thought to display accelerated evolution, a phenomenon that is captured by the two-speed genome hypothesis. The genome of the vascular wilt pathogen Verticillium dahliae has been proposed to obey to a similar two-speed regime with dynamic, lineage-specific regions that are characterized by genomic rearrangements, increased transposable element activity and enrichment in in planta-induced effector genes. However, little is known of the origin of, and sequence diversification within, these lineage-specific regions. Based on comparative genomics among Verticillium spp. we now show differential sequence divergence between core and lineage-specific genomic regions of V. dahliae. Surprisingly, we observed that lineage-specific regions display markedly increased sequence conservation. Since single nucleotide diversity is reduced in these regions, host adaptation seems to be merely achieved through presence/absence polymorphisms. Increased sequence conservation of genomic regions important for pathogenicity is an unprecedented finding for filamentous plant pathogens and signifies the diversity of genomic dynamics in host-pathogen co-evolution.


2013 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Parthasarathy Santhanam ◽  
Bart P. H. J. Thomma

The ascomycete fungus Verticillium dahliae causes vascular wilt diseases in hundreds of dicotyledonous plant species. However, thus far, only few V. dahliae effectors have been identified, and regulators of pathogenicity remain unknown. In this study, we investigated the role of the V. dahliae homolog of Sge1, a transcriptional regulator that was previously implicated in pathogenicity and effector gene expression in Fusarium oxysporum. We show that V. dahliae Sge1 (VdSge1) is required for radial growth and production of asexual conidiospores, because VdSge1 deletion strains display reduced radial growth and reduced conidia production. Furthermore, we show that VdSge1 deletion strains have lost pathogenicity on tomato. Remarkably, VdSge1 is not required for induction of Ave1, the recently identified V. dahliae effector that activates resistance mediated by the Ve1 immune receptor in tomato. Further assessment of the role of VdSge1 in the induction of the nine most highly in-planta-induced genes that encode putative effectors revealed differential activity. Although the expression of one putative effector gene in addition to Ave1 was not affected by VdSge1 deletion, VdSge1 appeared to be required for the expression of six putative effector genes, whereas two of the putative effectors genes were found to be negatively regulated by VdSge1. In conclusion, our data suggest that VdSge1 differentially regulates V. dahliae effector gene expression.


PeerJ ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. e2570 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher R. Clarke ◽  
Byron W. Hayes ◽  
Brendan J. Runde ◽  
Eric Markel ◽  
Bryan M. Swingle ◽  
...  

The majority of bacterial foliar plant pathogens must invade the apoplast of host plants through points of ingress, such as stomata or wounds, to replicate to high population density and cause disease. How pathogens navigate plant surfaces to locate invasion sites remains poorly understood. Many bacteria use chemical-directed regulation of flagellar rotation, a process known as chemotaxis, to move towards favorable environmental conditions. Chemotactic sensing of the plant surface is a potential mechanism through which foliar plant pathogens home in on wounds or stomata, but chemotactic systems in foliar plant pathogens are not well characterized. Comparative genomics of the plant pathogenPseudomonas syringaepathovartomato(Pto) implicated annotated chemotaxis genes in the recent adaptations of one Pto lineage. We therefore characterized the chemosensory system of Pto. The Pto genome contains two primary chemotaxis gene clusters,che1andche2. Theche2cluster is flanked by flagellar biosynthesis genes and similar to the canonical chemotaxis gene clusters of other bacteria based on sequence and synteny. Disruption of the primary phosphorelay kinase gene of theche2cluster,cheA2, eliminated all swimming and surface motility at 21  °C but not 28  °C for Pto. Theche1cluster is located next to Type IV pili biosynthesis genes but disruption ofcheA1has no observable effect on twitching motility for Pto. Disruption ofcheA2also altersin plantafitness of the pathogen with strains lacking functionalcheA2being less fit in host plants but more fit in a non-host interaction.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Clarke ◽  
Byron W Hayes ◽  
Brendan J Runde ◽  
Eric Markel ◽  
Bryan M Swingle ◽  
...  

The majority of bacterial foliar plant pathogens must invade the apoplast of host plants through points of ingress, such as stomata or wounds, to replicate to high population density and cause disease. How pathogens navigate plant surfaces to locate invasion sites remains poorly understood. Many bacteria use chemical-directed regulation of flagellar rotation, a process known as chemotaxis, to move towards favorable environmental conditions. Chemotactic sensing of the plant surface is a potential mechanism through which foliar plant pathogens home in on wounds or stomata, but chemotactic systems in foliar plant pathogens are not well characterized. Comparative genomics of the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pathovar tomato (Pto) implicated annotated chemotaxis genes in the recent adaptations of one Pto lineage. We therefore characterized the chemosensory system of Pto. The Pto genome contains two primary chemotaxis gene clusters, che1 and che2. The che2 cluster is flanked by flagellar biosynthesis genes and similar to the canonical chemotaxis gene clusters of other bacteria based on sequence and synteny. Disruption of the primary phosphorelay kinase gene of the che2 cluster, cheA2, eliminated all swimming and surface motility at 21oC but not 28oC for Pto. The che1 cluster is located next to Type IV pili biosynthesis genes but disruption of cheA1 has no observable effect on twitching motility for Pto. Disruption of cheA2 also alters in planta fitness of the pathogen with strains lacking functional cheA2 being less fit in host plants but more fit in a non-host interaction.


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