International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Aug 2021)

Evidence for the Role of <i>CYP51A</i> and Xenobiotic Detoxification in Differential Sensitivity to Azole Fungicides in Boxwood Blight Pathogens

  • Stefanos Stravoravdis,
  • Robert E. Marra,
  • Nicholas R. LeBlanc,
  • Jo Anne Crouch,
  • Jonathan P. Hulvey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22179255
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 17
p. 9255

Abstract

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Boxwood blight, a fungal disease of ornamental plants (Buxus spp.), is caused by two sister species, Calonectria pseudonaviculata (Cps) and C. henricotiae (Che). Compared to Cps, Che is documented to display reduced sensitivity to fungicides, including the azole class of antifungals, which block synthesis of a key fungal membrane component, ergosterol. A previous study reported an ergosterol biosynthesis gene in Cps, CYP51A, to be a pseudogene, and RNA-Seq data confirm that a functional CYP51A is expressed only in Che. The lack of additional ergosterol biosynthesis genes showing significant differential expression suggests that the functional CYP51A in Che could contribute to reduced azole sensitivity when compared to Cps. RNA-Seq and bioinformatic analyses found that following azole treatment, 55 genes in Cps, belonging to diverse pathways, displayed a significant decrease in expression. Putative xenobiotic detoxification genes overexpressed in tetraconazole-treated Che encoded predicted monooxygenase and oxidoreductase enzymes. In summary, expression of a functional CYP51A gene and overexpression of predicted xenobiotic detoxification genes appear likely to contribute to differential fungicide sensitivity in these two sister taxa.

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