International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2020)

<i>Aspergillus flavus</i> Exploits Maize Kernels Using an “Orphan” Secondary Metabolite Cluster

  • Ludovica Antiga,
  • Sonia Roberta La Starza,
  • Cecilia Miccoli,
  • Simone D’Angeli,
  • Valeria Scala,
  • Marco Zaccaria,
  • Xiaomei Shu,
  • Gregory Obrian,
  • Marzia Beccaccioli,
  • Gary A. Payne,
  • Massimo Reverberi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21218213
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 21
p. 8213

Abstract

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Aspergillus flavus is a saprophytic cosmopolitan fungus, capable of infecting crops both pre- and post-harvest and exploiting different secondary metabolites, including aflatoxins. Aflatoxins are known carcinogens to animals and humans, but display no clear effect in host plants such as maize. In a previous study, we mined the genome of A. flavus to identify secondary metabolite clusters putatively involving the pathogenesis process in maize. We now focus on cluster 32, encoding for fungal effectors such as salicylate hydroxylase (SalOH), and necrosis- and ethylene-inducing proteins (npp1 domain protein) whose expression is triggered upon kernel contact. In order to understand the role of this genetic cluster in maize kernel infection, mutants of A. flavus, impaired or enhanced in specific functions (e.g., cluster 32 overexpression), were studied for their ability to cause disease. Within this frame, we conducted histological and histochemical experiments to verify the expression of specific genes within the cluster (e.g., SalOH, npp1), the production of salicylate, and the presence of its dehydroxylated form. Results suggest that the initial phase of fungal infection (2 days) of the living tissues of maize kernels (e.g., aleuron) coincides with a significant increase of fungal effectors such as SalOH and Npp1 that appear to be instrumental in eluding host defences and colonising the starch-enriched tissues, and therefore suggest a role of cluster 32 to the onset of infection.

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