1. Host Physiology and Pathogenic Variation of Cochliobolus heterostrophus Strains with Mutations in the G Protein Alpha Subunit, CGA1
- Author
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Benjamin A. Horwitz, Rudy Maor, Ofir Degani, Ruthi Hadar, and Amir Sharon
- Subjects
Mutant ,Virulence ,Mycology ,Cochliobolus heterostrophus ,Zea mays ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology ,Fungal Proteins ,Ascomycota ,Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal ,Heterotrimeric G protein ,Pathogen ,Plant Diseases ,G alpha subunit ,Fungal protein ,Appressorium ,Ecology ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,GTP-Binding Protein alpha Subunits ,Plant Leaves ,Mutation ,Signal Transduction ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Conserved eukaryotic signaling proteins participate in development and disease in plant-pathogenic fungi. Strains with mutations in CGA1 , a heterotrimeric G protein G alpha subunit gene of the maize pathogen Cochliobolus heterostrophus , are defective in several developmental pathways. Conidia from CGA1 mutants germinate as abnormal, straight-growing germ tubes that form few appressoria, and the mutants are female sterile. Nevertheless, these mutants can cause normal lesions on plants, unlike other filamentous fungal plant pathogens in which functional homologues of CGA1 are required for full virulence. Δ cga1 mutants of C. heterostrophus were less infective of several maize varieties under most conditions, but not all, as virulence was nearly normal on detached leaves. This difference could be related to the rapid senescence of detached leaves, since delaying senescence with cytokinin also had differential effects on the virulence of the wild type and the Δ cga1 mutant. In particular, detached leaves may provide a more readily available nutrient source than attached leaves. Decreased fitness of Δ cga1 as a pathogen may reflect conditions under which full virulence requires signal transduction through CGA1-mediated pathways. The virulence of these signal transduction mutants is thus affected differentially by the physiological state of the host.
- Published
- 2004