Frontiers in Microbiology (Aug 2019)

Responses to Hydric Stress in the Seed-Borne Necrotrophic Fungus Alternaria brassicicola

  • Guillaume Quang N’Guyen,
  • Roxane Raulo,
  • Muriel Marchi,
  • Carlos Agustí-Brisach,
  • Beatrice Iacomi,
  • Sandra Pelletier,
  • Jean-Pierre Renou,
  • Nelly Bataillé-Simoneau,
  • Claire Campion,
  • Franck Bastide,
  • Bruno Hamon,
  • Chloé Mouchès,
  • Benoit Porcheron,
  • Remi Lemoine,
  • Anthony Kwasiborski,
  • Philippe Simoneau,
  • Thomas Guillemette

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.01969
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Alternaria brassicicola is a necrotrophic fungus causing black spot disease and is an economically important seed-borne pathogen of cultivated brassicas. Seed transmission is a crucial component of its parasitic cycle as it promotes long-term survival and dispersal. Recent studies, conducted with the Arabidopsis thaliana/A. brassicicola pathosystem, showed that the level of susceptibility of the fungus to water stress strongly influenced its seed transmission ability. In this study, we gained further insights into the mechanisms involved in the seed infection process by analyzing the transcriptomic and metabolomic responses of germinated spores of A. brassicicola exposed to water stress. Then, the repertoire of putative hydrophilins, a group of proteins that are assumed to be involved in cellular dehydration tolerance, was established in A. brassicicola based on the expression data and additional structural and biochemical criteria. Phenotyping of single deletion mutants deficient for fungal hydrophilin-like proteins showed that they were affected in their transmission to A. thaliana seeds, although their aggressiveness on host vegetative tissues remained intact.

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