38 results on '"Valent, Barbara"'
Search Results
2. How eukaryotic filamentous pathogens evade plant recognition.
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Oliveira-Garcia, Ely and Valent, Barbara
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PHYTOPATHOGENIC microorganisms , *OOMYCETES , *MICROBIAL invasiveness , *MICROBIAL development , *EUKARYOTIC cells - Abstract
Plant pathogenic fungi and oomycetes employ sophisticated mechanisms for evading host recognition. After host penetration, many fungi and oomycetes establish a biotrophic interaction. It is assumed that different strategies employed by these pathogens to avoid triggering host defence responses, including establishment of biotrophic interfacial layers between the pathogen and host, masking of invading hyphae and active suppression of host defence mechanisms, are essential for a biotrophic parasitic lifestyle. During the infection process, filamentous plant pathogens secrete various effectors, which are hypothesized to be involved in facilitating effective host infection. Live-cell imaging of fungi and oomycetes secreting fluorescently labeled effector proteins as well as functional characterization of the components of biotrophic interfaces have led to the recent progress in understanding how eukaryotic filamentous pathogens evade plant recognition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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3. Filamentous plant pathogen effectors in action.
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Giraldo, Martha C. and Valent, Barbara
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PHYTOPATHOGENIC microorganisms , *PLANT-pathogen relationships , *PLANT defenses , *FLUOROPHORES , *APPRESSORIA , *PLANT proteins - Abstract
Live-cell imaging assisted by fluorescent markers has been fundamental to understanding the focused secretory 'warfare' that occurs between plants and biotrophic pathogens that feed on living plant cells. Pathogens succeed through the spatiotemporal deployment of a remarkably diverse range of effector proteins to control plant defences and cellular processes. Some effectors can be secreted by appressoria even before host penetration, many enter living plant cells where they target diverse subcellular compartments and others move into neighbouring cells to prepare them before invasion. This Review summarizes the latest advances in our understanding of the cell biology of biotrophic interactions between plants and their eukaryotic filamentous pathogens based on in planta analyses of effectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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4. Communication Between Filamentous Pathogens and Plants at the Biotrophic Interface.
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Yi, Mihwa and Valent, Barbara
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FILAMENTOUS fungi , *PLANT cells & tissues , *PHYTOPATHOGENIC microorganisms , *CYTOPLASM , *HYPHAE of fungi , *FUNGAL membranes - Abstract
Fungi and oomycetes that colonize living plant tissue form extensive interfaces with plant cells in which the cytoplasm of the microorganism is closely aligned with the host cytoplasm for an extended distance. In all cases, specialized biotrophic hyphae function to hijack host cellu-lar processes across an interfacial zone consisting of a hyphal plasma membrane, a specialized interfacial matrix, and a plant-derived mem-brane. The interface is the site of active secretion by both players. This cross talk at the interface determines the winner in adversarial rela-tionships and establishes the partnership in mutualistic relationships. Fungi and oomycetes secrete many specialized effector proteins for controlling the host, and they can stimulate remarkable cellular reorga-nization even in distant plant cells. Breakthroughs in live-cell imaging of fungal and oomycete encounter sites, including live-cell imaging of pathogens secreting fluorescendy labeled effector proteins, have led to recent progress in understanding communication across the interface. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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5. Recent advances in rice blast effector research
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Valent, Barbara and Khang, Chang Hyun
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RICE blast disease , *PYRICULARIA grisea , *HYPHAE of fungi , *PLANT-pathogen relationships , *PLANT-fungus relationships , *DISEASE resistance of plants - Abstract
To cause rice blast disease, the fungus Magnaporthe oryzae produces biotrophic invasive hyphae that secrete effectors at the host–pathogen interface. Effectors facilitate disease development, but some (avirulence effectors) also trigger the host''s resistance gene-mediated hypersensitive response and block disease. The number of cloned M. oryzae avirulence effector genes has recently doubled, largely based on resequencing with a Japanese field isolate and association of avirulence activity with presence/absence polymorphisms in novel genes for secreted proteins. Effectors secreted by hyphae in rice cells accumulate in biotrophic interfacial complexes, and this property correlates with their translocation across plasma membrane into the rice cytoplasm. Interestingly, the translocated effectors moved into surrounding uninvaded cells, suggesting that effectors prepare host cells before the fungus enters them. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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6. Breaking and entering: Host penetration by the fungal rice blast pathogen Magnaporthe grisea.
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Howard, Richard J. and Valent, Barbara
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PHYTOPATHOGENIC fungi in host plants - Abstract
Discusses the diverse mechanism of fungal plant pathogens into its hosts. Different fungal structures for direct penetration; Genetic analysis of melanin production and deficiency; Mechanical forces in penetration process; Extracellular enzymes used in penetration.
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- 1996
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7. Rapid mini‐chromosome divergence among fungal isolates causing wheat blast outbreaks in Bangladesh and Zambia.
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Liu, Sanzhen, Lin, Guifang, Ramachandran, Sowmya R., Daza, Lidia Calderon, Cruppe, Giovana, Tembo, Batiseba, Singh, Pawan Kumar, Cook, David, Pedley, Kerry F., and Valent, Barbara
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WHEAT diseases & pests , *WHEAT , *PYRICULARIA oryzae , *CHROMOSOMES - Abstract
Summary: The fungal pathogen, Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum pathotype, causing wheat blast disease was first identified in South America and recently spread across continents to South Asia and Africa. Here, we studied the genetic relationship among isolates found on the three continents.Magnaporthe oryzae strains closely related to a South American field isolate B71 were found to have caused the wheat blast outbreaks in South Asia and Africa. Genomic variation among isolates from the three continents was examined using an improved B71 reference genome and whole‐genome sequences.We found strong evidence to support that the outbreaks in Bangladesh and Zambia were caused by the introductions of genetically separated isolates, although they were all close to B71 and, therefore, collectively referred to as the B71 branch. In addition, B71 branch strains carried at least one supernumerary mini‐chromosome. Genome assembly of a Zambian strain revealed that its mini‐chromosome was similar to the B71 mini‐chromosome but with a high level of structural variation.Our findings show that while core genomes of the multiple introductions are highly similar, the mini‐chromosomes have undergone marked diversification. The maintenance of the mini‐chromosome and rapid genomic changes suggest the mini‐chromosomes may serve important virulence or niche adaptation roles under diverse environmental conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Durable resistance to rice blast: A resistance gene pair balances immunity against crop yield.
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Guo-Liang Wang and Valent, Barbara
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GENES , *RICE yields , *DNA methylation , *PYRICULARIA oryzae - Abstract
The article discusses the highlights of a study about a new resistance (R) gene provided with a homologous partner to counteract rice yield penalty published in the same issue. Topics covered include how the blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae destroys rice crops worldwide, how nucleotide-binding, leucine-rich repeats (NLRs), PigmR and PigmS were cloned and characterized to balance immunity and yield via DNA methylation, and the recorded R gene-mediated immune responses.
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- 2017
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9. A Réévaluation of Phylogenomic Data Reveals that Current Understanding in Wheat Blast Population Biology and Epidemiology Is Obfuscated by Oversights in Population Sampling.
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Farman, Mark L., Ascari, Joao P., Rahnama, Mostafa, Del Ponte, Emerson M., Pedley, Kerry F., Martinez, Sebastián, Fernandes, José Mauricio C., and Valent, Barbara
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POPULATION biology , *WHEAT , *PYRICULARIA oryzae , *GENE flow , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *WINTER wheat - Abstract
Wheat blast, caused by the Pyricularia oryzae Triticum lineage (PoT), first emerged in Brazil and quickly spread to neighboring countries. Its recent appearance in Bangladesh and Zambia highlights a need to understand the disease's population biology and epidemiology so as to mitigate pandemic outbreaks. Current knowledge is mostly based on characterizations of Brazilian wheat blast isolates and comparison with isolates from non-wheat, endemic grasses. These foregoing studies concluded that the wheat blast population lacks host specificity and, as a result, undergoes extensive gene flow with populations infecting nonwheat hosts. Additionally, based on genetic similarity between wheat blast and isolates infecting Urochloa species, it was proposed that the disease originally emerged via a host jump from this grass and that Vrochloa likely plays a central role in wheat blast epidemiology owing to its widespread use as a pasture grass. However, due to inconsistencies with broader phylogenetic studies, we suspected that these seminal studies had not actually sampled the populations normally found on endemic grasses and, instead, had repeatedly isolated members of PoT and the related Lolium pathogen lineage (PoLl). Re-analysis of the Brazilian data as part of a comprehensive, global, phylogenomic dataset that included a small number of South American isolates sampled away from wheat confirmed our suspicion and identified four new P. oryzae lineages on grass hosts. As a result, the conclusions underpinning current understanding in wheat blast's evolution, population biology, and epidemiology are unsubstantiated and could be equivocal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Filamentous pathogen effectors enter plant cells via endocytosis.
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Wang, Haixia, Oliveira-Garcia, Ely, Boevink, Petra C., Talbot, Nicholas J., Birch, Paul R.J., and Valent, Barbara
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PHYTOPATHOGENIC microorganisms , *PATHOGENIC microorganisms , *SECRETION , *ENDOCYTOSIS - Abstract
Recent findings demonstrate that cytoplasmic effectors from fungal and oomycete pathogens enter plant cells via clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME). This raises several questions: Does effector secretion pathway facilitate host uptake? How is CME triggered in host cells? How are the effectors released from endosomal compartments to reach diverse subcellular destinations? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Plant disease: Underground life for rice foe.
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Valent, Barbara
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RICE blast disease , *PYRICULARIA oryzae , *RICE diseases & pests , *FUNGI imperfecti , *PHYTOPATHOGENIC microorganisms , *AGRICULTURAL microbiology , *PHYTOPATHOGENIC fungi - Abstract
Reports that the rice blast fungus, which has become a model system for studying the aerial attack of fungi on plants, also invades roots, using a typical root-specific pathway. Occurrence of infection when airborne spores land on rice plants; Formation of large, highly pigmented runner hyphae on the root surface when these fungi were introduced to the roots.
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- 2004
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12. Clathrin-mediated endocytosis facilitates the internalization of Magnaporthe oryzae effectors into rice cells.
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Oliveira-Garcia, Ely, Tamang, Tej Man, Park, Jungeun, Dalby, Melinda, Martin-Urdiroz, Magdalena, Herrero, Clara Rodriguez, Vu, An Hong, Park, Sunghun, Talbot, Nicholas J, and Valent, Barbara
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PYRICULARIA oryzae , *PLANT plasma membranes , *ENDOCYTOSIS , *COATED vesicles , *GENE silencing , *CELL imaging , *RICE - Abstract
Fungi and oomycetes deliver effectors into living plant cells to suppress defenses and control plant processes needed for infection. Little is known about the mechanism by which these pathogens translocate effector proteins across the plasma membrane into the plant cytoplasm. The blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae secretes cytoplasmic effectors into a specialized biotrophic interfacial complex (BIC) before translocation. Here, we show that cytoplasmic effectors within BICs are packaged into punctate membranous effector compartments that are occasionally observed in the host cytoplasm. Live cell imaging with fluorescently labeled proteins in rice (Oryza sativa) showed that these effector puncta colocalize with the plant plasma membrane and with CLATHRIN LIGHT CHAIN 1, a component of clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME). Inhibiting CME using virus-induced gene silencing and chemical treatments resulted in cytoplasmic effectors in swollen BICs lacking effector puncta. By contrast, fluorescent marker colocalization, gene silencing, and chemical inhibitor studies failed to support a major role for clathrin-independent endocytosis in effector translocation. Effector localization patterns indicated that cytoplasmic effector translocation occurs underneath appressoria before invasive hyphal growth. Taken together, this study provides evidence that cytoplasmic effector translocation is mediated by CME in BICs and suggests a role for M. oryzae effectors in coopting plant endocytosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Roles for Rice Membrane Dynamics and Plasmodesmata during Biotrophic Invasion by the Blast Fungus.
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Kankanala, Prasanna, Czymmek, Kirk, and Valent, Barbara
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RICE blast disease , *PLASMODESMATA , *PLANT membranes , *CELL membranes , *CHRONOPHOTOGRAPHY , *RICE - Abstract
Rice blast disease is caused by the hemibiotrophic fungus Magnaporthe oryzae, which invades living plant cells using intracellular invasive hyphae (IH) that grow from one cell to the next. The cellular and molecular processes by which this occurs are not understood. We applied live-cell imaging to characterize the spatial and temporal development of IH and plant responses inside successively invaded rice (Oryza sativa) cells. Loading experiments with the endocytotic tracker FM4-64 showed dynamic plant membranes around IH. IH were sealed in a plant membrane, termed the extra-invasive hyphal membrane (EIHM), which showed multiple connections to peripheral rice cell membranes. The IH switched between pseudohyphal and filamentous growth. Successive cell invasions were biotrophic, although each invaded cell appeared to have lost viability when the fungus moved into adjacent cells. EIHM formed distinct membrane caps at the tips of IH that initially grew in neighboring cells. Time-lapse imaging showed IH scanning plant cell walls before crossing, and transmission electron microscopy showed IH preferentially contacting or crossing cell walls at pit fields. This and additional evidence strongly suggest that IH co-opt plasmodesmata for cell-to-cell movement. Analysis of biotrophic blast invasion will significantly contribute to our understanding of normal plant processes and allow the characterization of secreted fungal effectors that affect these processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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14. Genome‐wide association reveals limited benefits of pyramiding the 1B and 1D loci with the 2NvS translocation for wheat blast control.
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Cruppe, Giovana, Silva, Paula, Lemes da Silva, Cristiano, Peterson, Gary, Pedley, Kerry F., Cruz, Christian D., Asif, Mohammad, Lollato, Romulo P., Fritz, Allan K., and Valent, Barbara
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FALSE discovery rate , *SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms , *WHEAT , *PRINCIPAL components analysis , *LINKAGE disequilibrium , *PYRICULARIA oryzae , *LOCUS (Genetics) - Abstract
Resistance to wheat spike blast (WSB), caused by the Magnaporthe oryzae triticum pathotype (MoT), has relied upon a single major source: the 2NvS translocation introgressed from the wild relative Aegilops ventricosa Tausch. However, this resistance is partial and recently partially overcome by newer MoT races. To characterize potential novel loci conferring resistance to WSB, we conducted a genome‐wide association study (GWAS) using a diverse panel of 384 wheat genotypes phenotyped under three controlled‐environment conditions using MoT isolates T‐25 (301 genotypes), B‐71 (87 genotypes), and 008 (49 genotypes). Genotyping‐by‐sequencing identified 13,175 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) after filtering. Principal components analysis (PCA) identified two clusters based on the presence or absence of the 2NvS translocation, and the first three PCAs explained 13% of the genetic variation. Three individual analyses were performed (full [all genotypes combined], 2NvS genotypes only, and non‐2NvS genotypes only) using a linear mixed model and a threshold of significance of false discovery rate at 5%. Association analysis detected 25 significant SNPs for the full GWAS with isolate T‐25, in which 21 were mapped on chromosome 2A in the same physical position as the 2NvS translocation. Highly significant linkage disequilibrium among these SNPs suggested they might tag the same quantitative trait locus (QTL). No significant associations were identified with isolates B‐71 and 008, likely due to the small sample size. A QTL pyramiding analysis showed that the combination of multiple QTL was not statistically different from the individual effect of the 2A QTL. Further validation of these genomic regions can aid breeding for broad spectrum and durable WSB resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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15. Effector gene reshuffling involves dispensable mini-chromosomes in the wheat blast fungus.
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Peng, Zhao, Oliveira-Garcia, Ely, Lin, Guifang, Hu, Ying, Dalby, Melinda, Migeon, Pierre, Tang, Haibao, Farman, Mark, Cook, David, White, Frank F., Valent, Barbara, and Liu, Sanzhen
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RICE blast disease , *WHEAT , *MOBILE genetic elements , *BOTANY , *FUNGAL genetics - Abstract
Newly emerged wheat blast disease is a serious threat to global wheat production. Wheat blast is caused by a distinct, exceptionally diverse lineage of the fungus causing rice blast disease. Through sequencing a recent field isolate, we report a reference genome that includes seven core chromosomes and mini-chromosome sequences that harbor effector genes normally found on ends of core chromosomes in other strains. No mini-chromosomes were observed in an early field strain, and at least two from another isolate each contain different effector genes and core chromosome end sequences. The mini-chromosome is enriched in transposons occurring most frequently at core chromosome ends. Additionally, transposons in mini-chromosomes lack the characteristic signature for inactivation by repeat-induced point (RIP) mutation genome defenses. Our results, collectively, indicate that dispensable mini-chromosomes and core chromosomes undergo divergent evolutionary trajectories, and mini-chromosomes and core chromosome ends are coupled as a mobile, fast-evolving effector compartment in the wheat pathogen genome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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16. Conidial Morphogenesis and Septin-Mediated Plant Infection Require Smo1, a Ras GTPase-Activating Protein in Magnaporthe oryzae.
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Kershaw, Michael J., Basiewicz, Magdalena, Soanes, Darren M., Xia Yan, Ryder, Lauren S., Csukai, Michael, Oses-Ruiz, Miriam, Valent, Barbara, and Talbot, Nicholas J.
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CARRIER proteins , *CELLULAR signal transduction , *CYTOPLASM , *FUNGI , *GENETICS , *GENOMES , *MORPHOGENESIS , *MUSCLE proteins , *GENETIC mutation , *PLANT diseases , *PLANTS , *PROTEINS , *RICE - Abstract
The pathogenic life cycle of the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae involves a series of morphogenetic changes, essential for its ability to cause disease. The smo mutation was identified. 25 years ago, and affects the shape and development of diverse cell types in M. oryzae, including conidia, appressoria, and asci. All attempts to clone the SMO1 gene by map-based cloning or complementation have failed over many years. Here, we report the identification of SMO1 by a combination of bulk segregant analysis and comparative genome analysis. SMO1 encodes a GTPase-activating protein, which regulates Ras signaling during infectionrelated development. Targeted deletion of SMO1 results in abnormal, nonadherent conidia, impaired in their production of spore tip mucilage. Smo1 mutants also develop smaller appressoria, with a severely reduced capacity to infect rice plants. SMO1 is necessary for the organization of microtubules and for septin-dependent remodeling of the F-actin cytoskeleton at the appressorium pore. Smo1 physically interacts with components of the Ras2 signaling complex, and a range of other signaling and cytoskeletal components, including the four core septins. SMO1 is therefore necessary for the regulation of RAS activation required for conidial morphogenesis and septin-mediated plant infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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17. Specific Detection of the Wheat Blast Pathogen (Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum) by Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification.
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Yasuhara-Bell, Jarred, Pedley, Kerry F., Farman, Mark, Valent, Barbara, and Stack, Janies P.
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WHEAT farming , *PLANT diseases , *RICE blast disease , *PATHOGENIC microorganisms , *PYRICULARIA oryzae - Abstract
Wheat blast, caused by the Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum pathotype, is an economically important fungal disease of wheat. Wheat blast symptoms are similar to Fusarium head scab and can cause confusion in the field. Currently, no in-field diagnostic exists for M. oryzae Triticum. Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) primers were designed to target the PoT2 and MoT3 loci, previously shown to be specific for M. oryzae and M. oryzae Triticum, respectively. Specificity was determined using 158 M. oryzae strains collected from infected wheat and other grasses and representing geographic and temporal variation. Negative controls included 50 Fusarium spp. isolates. Sensitivity was assessed using 10-fold serial dilutions of M. oryzae Triticum gDNA. PoT2- and MoT3-based assays showed high specificity for M. oryzae and M. oryzae Triticum, respectively, and sensitivity to approximately 5 pg of DNA per reaction. PoT2 and MoT3 assays were tested on M. oryzae Triticum-infected wheat seed and spikes and identified M. oryzae and M. oryzae Triticum, respectively, using a field DNA extraction kit and the portable Genie II system. The mitochondrial NADH-dehydrogenase (nad5) gene, an internal control for plant DNA, was multiplexed with PoT2 and MoT3 and showed results comparable with individual assays. These results show applicability for M. oryzae Triticum field surveillance, as well as identifying nonwheat species that may serve as a reservoir or source of inoculum for nearby wheat fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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18. A single fungal MAP kinase controls plant cell-to-cell invasion by the rice blast fungus.
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Sakulkoo, Wasin, Osés-Ruiz, Miriam, Oliveira Garcia, Ely, Soanes, Darren M., Littlejohn, George R., Hacker, Christian, Correia, Ana, Valent, Barbara, and Talbot, Nicholas J.
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MITOGEN-activated protein kinases , *RICE blast disease , *PYRICULARIA oryzae , *RICE farming , *COLONIZATION (Ecology) , *AGRICULTURE & the environment - Abstract
Blast disease destroys up to 30% of the rice crop annually and threatens global food security. The blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae invades plant tissue with hyphae that proliferate and grow from cell to cell, often through pit fields, where plasmodesmata cluster. We showed that chemical genetic inhibition of a single fungal mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase, Pmk1, prevents M. oryzae from infecting adjacent plant cells, leaving the fungus trapped within a single plant cell. Pmk1 regulates expression of secreted fungal effector proteins implicated in suppression of host immune defenses, preventing reactive oxygen species generation and excessive callose deposition at plasmodesmata. Furthermore, Pmk1 controls the hyphal constriction required for fungal growth from one rice cell to the neighboring cell, enabling host tissue colonization and blast disease [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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19. Identification and characterization of suppressors of plant cell death (SPD) effectors from Magnaporthe oryzae.
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Sharpee, William, Oh, Yeonyee, Yi, Mihwa, Franck, William, Eyre, Alex, Okagaki, Laura H., Valent, Barbara, and Dean, Ralph A.
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RICE blast disease , *RICE blast disease prevention , *NICOTIANA benthamiana , *PLANT cell biotechnology , *PLANT cells & tissues , *PLANT cell interaction - Abstract
Phytopathogenic microorganisms, including the fungal pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae, secrete a myriad of effector proteins to facilitate infection. Utilizing the transient expression of candidate effectors in the leaves of the model plant Nicotiana benthamiana, we identified 11 suppressors of plant cell death (SPD) effectors from M. oryzae that were able to block the host cell death reaction induced by Nep1. Ten of these 11 were also able to suppress BAX-mediated plant cell death. Five of the 11 SPD genes have been identified previously as either essential for the pathogenicity of M. oryzae, secreted into the plant during disease development, or as suppressors or homologues of other characterized suppressors. In addition, of the remaining six, we showed that SPD8 (previously identified as BAS162) was localized to the rice cytoplasm in invaded and surrounding uninvaded cells during biotrophic invasion. Sequence analysis of the 11 SPD genes across 43 re-sequenced M. oryzae genomes revealed that SPD2, SPD4 and SPD7 have nucleotide polymorphisms amongst the isolates. SPD4 exhibited the highest level of nucleotide diversity of any currently known effector from M. oryzae in addition to the presence/absence polymorphisms, suggesting that this gene is potentially undergoing selection to avoid recognition by the host. Taken together, we have identified a series of effectors, some of which were previously unknown or whose function was unknown, that probably act at different stages of the infection process and contribute to the virulence of M. oryzae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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20. Evolution of the wheat blast fungus through functional losses in a host specificity determinant.
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Yoshihiro Inoue, Vy, Trinh T. P., Kentaro Yoshida, Hokuto Asano, Chikako Mitsuoka, Soichiro Asuke, Anh, Vu L., Cumagun, Christian J. R., Izumi Chuma, Terauchi, Ryohei, Kenji Kato, Mitchell, Thomas, Valent, Barbara, Farman, Mark, and Yukio Tosa
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RICE blast disease , *CROP losses , *PATHOGENIC microorganisms , *PLANT diseases , *RICE diseases & pests - Abstract
Wheat blast first emerged in Brazil in the mid-1980s and has recently caused heavy crop losses in Asia. Here we show how this devastating pathogen evolved in Brazil. Genetic analysis of host species determinants in the blast fungus resulted in the cloning of avirulence genes PWT3 and PWT4, whose gene products elicit defense in wheat cultivars containing the corresponding resistance genes Rwt3 and Rwt4. Studies on avirulence and resistance gene distributions, together with historical data on wheat cultivation in Brazil, suggest that wheat blast emerged due to widespread deployment of rwt3 wheat (susceptible to Lolium isolates), followed by the loss of function of PWT3. This implies that the rwt3 wheat served as a springboard for the host jump to common wheat. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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21. The Lolium Pathotype of Magnaporthe oryzae Recovered from a Single Blasted Wheat Plant in the United States.
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Farman, Mark, Peterson, Gary, Li Chen, Starnes, John, Valent, Barbara, Bachi, Paul, Murdock, Lloyd, Hershman, Don, Pedley, Kerry, Mauricio Fernandes, J., and Bavaresco, Jorge
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RYEGRASSES , *WHEAT disease & pest resistance , *PYRICULARIA oryzae , *FUSARIUM diseases of plants , *FUNGAL diseases of plants - Abstract
Wheat blast is a devastating disease that was first identified in Brazil and has subsequently spread to surrounding countries in South America. In May 2011, disease scouting in a University of Kentucky wheat trial plot in Princeton, KY identified a single plant with disease symptoms that differed from the Fusarium head blight that was present in surrounding wheat. The plant in question bore a single diseased head that was bleached yellow from a point about one-third up the rachis to the tip. A gray mycelial mass was observed at the boundary of the healthy tissue and microscopic examination of this material revealed pyriform spores consistent with a Magnaporthe sp. The pathogen was subsequently identified as Magnaporthe oryzae through amplification and sequencing of molecular markers, and genome sequencing revealed that the U.S. wheat blast isolate was most closely related to an M. oryzae strain isolated from annual ryegrass in 2002 and quite distantly related to M. oryzae strains causing wheat blast in South America. The suspect isolate was pathogenic to wheat, as indicated by growth chamber inoculation tests. We conclude that this first occurrence of wheat blast in the United States was most likely caused by a strain that evolved from an endemic Lolium-infecting pathogen and not by an exotic introduction from South America. Moreover, we show that M. oryzae strains capable of infecting wheat have existed in the United States for at least 16 years. Finally, evidence is presented that the environmental conditions in Princeton during the spring of 2011 were unusually conducive to the early production of blast inoculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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22. Genomics-Based Marker Discovery and Diagnostic Assay Development for Wheat Blast.
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Pieck, Michael L., Ruck, Amy, Farman, Mark L., Peterson, Gary L., Stack, James P., Valent, Barbara, and Pedley, Kerry F.
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WHEAT diseases & pests , *PYRICULARIA oryzae , *PHYTOPATHOGENIC fungi , *POLYMERASE chain reaction , *FUNGAL DNA - Abstract
Wheat blast has emerged as a major threat to wheat production in South America. Although originally restricted to Brazil, the disease has since been observed in the neighboring countries of Argentina, Bolivia, and Paraguay and recently the pathogen, Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum pathotype, was isolated from infected wheat in Bangladesh. There is growing concern that the pathogen may continue to spread to other parts of the world, including the United States, where several M. oryzae pathotypes are endemic. M. oryzae pathotypes are morphologically indistinguishable and, therefore, must be characterized genotypically. Symptoms of wheat blast include bleaching of the head, which closely resembles the symptoms of Fusarium head blight, further complicating efforts to monitor for the presence of the pathogen in the field. We used a genomics-based approach to identify molecular markers unique to the Triticum pathotype of M. oryzae. One of these markers, MoT3, was selected for the development of a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based diagnostic assay that was evaluated for specificity using DNA from 284 M. oryzae isolates collected from a diverse array of host species. Conventional PCR primers were designed to amplify a 361-bp product, and the protocol consistently amplified from as little as 0.1 ng of purified DNA. The specificity of the MoT3-based assay was also evaluated using Fusarium spp. DNA, from which no amplicons were detected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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23. Climate Suitability for Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum Pathotype in the United States.
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Cruz, Christian D., Magarey, Roger D., Christie, David N., Fowler, Glenn A., Fernandes, Jose M., Bockus, William W., Valent, Barbara, and Stack, James P.
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WHEAT diseases & pests , *PYRICULARIA oryzae , *ORYZAEPHILUS , *PLANT diseases , *CONTROL of phytopathogenic microorganisms - Abstract
Wheat blast, caused by the Triticum pathotype of Magnaporthe oryzae, is an emerging disease considered to be a limiting factor to wheat production in various countries. Given the importance of wheat blast as a high-consequence plant disease, weather-based infection models were used to estimate the probabilities of M. oryzae Triticum establishment and wheat blast outbreaks in the United States. The models identified significant disease risk in some areas. With the threshold levels used, the models predicted that the climate was adequate for maintaining M. oryzae Triticum populations in 40% of winter wheat production areas of the United States. Disease outbreak threshold levels were only reached in 25% of the country. In Louisiana, Mississippi, and Florida, the probability of years suitable for outbreaks was greater than 70%. The models generated in this study should provide the foundation for more advanced models in the future, and the results reported could be used to prioritize research efforts regarding the biology of M. oryzae Triticum and the epidemiology of the wheat blast disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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24. Characterization and regulation of expression of an antifungal peptide from hemolymph of an insect, Manduca sexta.
- Author
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Al Souhail, Qasim, Hiromasa, Yasuaki, Rahnamaeian, Mohammad, Giraldo, Martha C., Takahashi, Daisuke, Valent, Barbara, Vilcinskas, Andreas, and Kanost, Michael R.
- Subjects
- *
GENE expression , *GENETIC regulation , *HEMOLYMPH , *MANDUCA , *PEPTIDE antibiotics , *NATURAL immunity - Abstract
Insects secrete antimicrobial peptides as part of the innate immune response. Most antimicrobial peptides from insects have antibacterial but not antifungal activity. We have characterized an antifungal peptide, diapausin-1 from hemolymph of a lepidopteran insect, Manduca sexta (tobacco hornworm). Diapausin-1 was isolated by size exclusion chromatography from hemolymph plasma of larvae that were previously injected with a yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae . Fractions containing activity against S. cerevisiae were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and MALDI-TOF MS/MS and found to contain a 45-residue peptide that was encoded by sequences identified in M. sexta transcriptome and genome databases. A cDNA for diapausin-1 was cloned from cDNA prepared from fat body RNA. Diapausin-1 is a member of the diapausin family of peptides, which includes members known to have antifungal activity. The M. sexta genome contains 14 genes with high similarity to diapausin-1, each with 6 conserved Cys residues. Diapausin-1 was produced as a recombinant protein in Escherichia coli . Purified recombinant diapausin-1 was active against S. cerevisiae , with IC 50 of 12 μM, but had no detectable activity against bacteria. Spores of some plant fungal pathogens treated with diapausin-1 had curled germination tubes or reduced and branched hyphal growth. Diapausin-1 mRNA level in fat body strongly increased after larvae were injected with yeast or with Micrococcus luteus . In addition, diapausin-1 mRNA levels increased in midgut and fat body at the wandering larval stage prior to pupation, suggesting developmental regulation of the gene. Our results indicate that synthesis of diapausin-1 is part of an antifungal innate immune response to infection in M. sexta . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. A Response to Gupta et al. (2019) Regarding the MoT3 Wheat Blast Diagnostic Assay.
- Author
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Yasuhara-Bell, Jarred, Pieck, Michael L., Ruck, Amy, Farman, Mark L., PetersonX, Gary L., Stack, James P., Valent, Barbara, and Pedlcy, Kerry F.
- Subjects
- *
WHEAT , *BLASTING , *PYRICULARIA oryzae , *PLANT diseases , *RICE - Abstract
This is a response to a recent Letter to the Editor of Phytopathology, in which Gupta et al. (2019) caution against the indiscriminate use of the MoT3 diagnostic assay that distinguishes isolates of Magnaporthe oryzae in the Triticum lineage from those that do not cause aggressive wheat blast. We confirm that the assay does reliably distinguish between wheat and rice isolates from Bangladesh and worldwide, as described in the original paper by Pieck et al. (2017). We have been unable to reproduce the equally intense amplification of WB12 and WB 12-like sequences reported in Figure 1 of the Letter. Other data presented by Gupta et al. (2019) support the specificity of the MoT3 assay. Therefore, cautions beyond those always associated with accurate reproduction of diagnostic assays are unwarranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Generic names in Magnaporthales.
- Author
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Zhang, Ning, Luo, Jing, Rossman, Amy Y., Aoki, Takayuki, Chuma, Izumi, Crous, Pedro W., Dean, Ralph, de Vries, Ronald P., Donofrio, Nicole, Hyde, Kevin D., Lebrun, Marc-Henri, Talbot, Nicholas J., Tharreau, Didier, Tosa, Yukio, Valent, Barbara, Wang, Zonghua, and Xu, Jin-Rong
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Are all GMOs the same? Consumer acceptance of cisgenic rice in India.
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Shew, Aaron M., Nalley, Lawton L., Danforth, Diana M., Dixon, Bruce L., Nayga, Rodolfo M., Delwaide, Anne‐Cecile, and Valent, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
TRANSGENIC plants , *RICE breeding , *CONSUMER behavior , *FOOD supply , *NUCLEOTIDE sequence - Abstract
India has more than 215 million food-insecure people, many of whom are farmers. Genetically modified (GM) crops have the potential to alleviate this problem by increasing food supplies and strengthening farmer livelihoods. For this to occur, twofactors are critical: (i) a change in the regulatory status of GM crops, and (ii) consumer acceptance of GM foods. There are generally two classifications of GM crops based on how they are bred: cisgenically bred, containing only DNA sequences from sexually compatible organisms; and transgenically bred, including DNA sequences from sexually incompatible organisms. Consumers may view cisgenic foods as more natural than those produced via transgenesis, thus influencing consumer acceptance. This premise was the catalyst for our study-would Indian consumers accept cisgenically bred rice and if so, how would they value cisgenics compared to conventionally bred rice, GM-labelled rice and 'nofungicide' rice? In this willingness-to-pay study, respondents did not view cisgenic and GM rice differently. However, participants were willing-to-pay a premium for any aforementioned rice with a 'nofungicide' attribute, which cisgenics and GM could provide. Although not significantly different (P = 0.16), 76% and 73% of respondents stated a willingness-to-consume GM and cisgenic foods, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Experimental and producer-reported data quantify the value of foliar fungicide to winter wheat and its dependency on genotype and environment in the U.S. central Great Plains.
- Author
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Cruppe, Giovana, DeWolf, Erick, Jaenisch, Brent R., Andersen Onofre, Kelsey, Valent, Barbara, Fritz, Allan K., and Lollato, Romulo P.
- Subjects
- *
FUNGICIDES , *WINTER wheat , *WHEAT , *STRIPE rust , *GENOTYPES , *ANALYSIS of covariance - Abstract
• We quantified the yield benefits of fungicide to wheat using plot and survey data. • Fungicide yield benefits (7.8 ± 15 %) were greater in wetter growing seasons. • Susceptible genotypes benefited more from fungicides (17 %) than resistant ones (6 %). • Fungicides improved stability and modified environment-adaptability of genotypes. • Fungicide yield benefits were greater (31 %) in the survey data. Foliar fungicides can account for a large portion of the yield gap in winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.); however, their impacts on yield have been inconsistent in rainfed environments. We compiled a database of replicated field experiments and producer-reported fungicide and yield data from commercial fields to quantify the effects of fungicide application on winter wheat yield and yield stability. The database of field experiments (i.e., canopy level) included 56 non-inoculated environments spanning 12 growing seasons in eight Kansas locations, and was restricted to field experiments with direct comparisons between a foliar fungicide between Zadoks 40–55 and a side-by-side untreated control, resulting in 393 mean yield comparisons resulting from 3226 yield observations. The producer survey included genotype and fungicide management data from 654 commercial Kansas wheat fields cultivated across three growing seasons. Grain yield and weather conditions in the experimental and producer-reported database were similar, with seasonal precipitation ranging from ˜150 to 1035 mm and average grain yield of ˜3900 kg ha−1 with a ˜7000 kg ha−1 range. Foliar fungicide application resulted in 7.8 % average yield gain in the canopy-level data, ranging from −27 % to +97 %. Yield differences due to fungicide were strongly related to precipitation and to the ratio of precipitation and reference evapotranspiration (WS:WD) during the spring in the experimental data. Grain yield responsiveness to fungicide associated with the responsiveness of green canopy cover, kernel weight, biomass, and harvest index. Analysis of covariance suggested that grain yield usually decreased with increases in disease susceptibility in the absence of foliar fungicides; however, yield-disease relationships were either neutral or positive in the presence of fungicides. Average yield gain for resistant varieties was ˜166 kg ha−1 (5.6 %), which was lower than for intermediate (˜199 kg ha−1; 6.9 %) or susceptible genotypes (˜598 kg ha−1; 16.9 %). Foliar fungicides increased yield stability across genotypes at the canopy level and at the commercial field level. In the commercial-field level data, 53 % of the fields received foliar fungicide, with higher frequency in growing seasons with greater WS:WD (which were also higher yielding). The use of foliar fungicides was associated with improved yields and interacted with genotype's resistance level to stripe rust and with growing seasons' WS:WD. This work quantified and explained the yield benefits of foliar fungicide, and characterized its dependency on genotype-specific disease resistance and environmental conditions both at the canopy- and commercial field-levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Magnaporthe oryzae Effector AvrPiz-t Targets the RING E3 Ubiquitin Ligase APIP6 to Suppress Pathogen-Associated Molecular Pattern–Triggered Immunity in Rice.
- Author
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Park, Chan-Ho, Chen, Songbiao, Shirsekar, Gautam, Zhou, Bo, Khang, Chang Hyun, Songkumarn, Pattavipha, Afzal, Ahmed J., Ning, Yuese, Wang, Ruyi, Bellizzi, Maria, Valent, Barbara, and Wang, Guo-Liang
- Abstract
Although the functions of a few effector proteins produced by bacterial and oomycete plant pathogens have been elucidated in recent years, information for the vast majority of pathogen effectors is still lacking, particularly for those of plant-pathogenic fungi. Here, we show that the avirulence effector AvrPiz-t from the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae preferentially accumulates in the specialized structure called the biotrophic interfacial complex and is then translocated into rice (Oryza sativa) cells. Ectopic expression of AvrPiz-t in transgenic rice suppresses the flg22- and chitin-induced generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and enhances susceptibility to M. oryzae , indicating that AvrPiz-t functions to suppress pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP)-triggered immunity in rice. Interaction assays show that AvrPiz-t suppresses the ubiquitin ligase activity of the rice RING E3 ubiquitin ligase APIP6 and that, in return, APIP6 ubiquitinates AvrPiz-t in vitro. Interestingly, agroinfection assays reveal that AvrPiz-t and A vr P iz-t I nteracting P rotein 6 (APIP6) are both degraded when coexpressed in Nicotiana benthamiana. Silencing of APIP6 in transgenic rice leads to a significant reduction of flg22-induced ROS generation, suppression of defense-related gene expression, and enhanced susceptibility of rice plants to M. oryzae. Taken together, our results reveal a mechanism in which a fungal effector targets the host ubiquitin proteasome system for the suppression of PAMP -triggered immunity in plants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Preliminary Assessment of Resistance Among U.S. Wheat Cultivars to the Triticum Pathotype of Magnaporthe oryzae.
- Author
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Cruz, Christian D., Bockus, William W., Stack, James P., Xiaoyan Tang, Valent, Barbara, Pedley, Kerry F., and Peterson, Gary L.
- Subjects
- *
WHEAT disease & pest resistance , *WHEAT varieties , *GRASSES , *PYRICULARIA oryzae , *AGRICULTURAL productivity ,SEEDLING diseases & pests - Abstract
Magnaporthe oryzae is the causal agent of blast disease on several graminaceous plants. The M. oryzae population causing wheat blast has not been officially reported outside South America. Wheat production in the United States is at risk to this pathogen if it is introduced and established. Proactive testing of U.S. wheat cultivars for their reaction to blast and identification of resistance resources is crucial due to the national and global importance of the U.S. wheat industry. In this preliminary study, the phenotypic reaction of 85 U.S. wheat cultivars to M. oryzae (Triticum pathotype) was determined. Although there was a significant correlation in the reaction to blast at the seedling and adult plant stages, only 57% of the head reaction was explained by the seedling reaction. Because of the importance of disease development at the head stage in the field, assessment of all 85 cultivars occurred at the head stage. Among cultivars tested, a continuum in severity to head blast was observed; cultivars Everest and Karl 92 were highly susceptible with more than 90% disease severity, while cultivars Postrock, JackPot, Overley, Jagalene, Jagger, and Santa Fe showed less than 3% infection. No evidence of the presence of physiological races among isolates T-7, T-12, T-22, and T-25 was found. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Multiple Translocation of the AVR-Pita Effector Gene among Chromosomes of the Rice Blast Fungus Magnaporthe oryzae and Related Species.
- Author
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Chuma, Izumi, Isobe, Chihiro, Hotta, Yuma, Ibaragi, Kana, Futamata, Natsuru, Kusaba, Motoaki, Yoshida, Kentaro, Terauchi, Ryohei, Fujita, Yoshikatsu, Nakayashiki, Hitoshi, Valent, Barbara, and Tosa, Yukio
- Subjects
- *
CHROMOSOMAL translocation , *CHROMOSOMES , *PYRICULARIA grisea , *RICE blast disease , *RICE varieties , *HOMOLOGY (Biology) , *PHYTOPATHOGENIC microorganisms - Abstract
Magnaporthe oryzae is the causal agent of rice blast disease, a devastating problem worldwide. This fungus has caused breakdown of resistance conferred by newly developed commercial cultivars. To address how the rice blast fungus adapts itself to new resistance genes so quickly, we examined chromosomal locations of AVR-Pita, a subtelomeric gene family corresponding to the Pita resistance gene, in various isolates of M. oryzae (including wheat and millet pathogens) and its related species. We found that AVR-Pita (AVR-Pita1 and AVR-Pita2) is highly variable in its genome location, occurring in chromosomes 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and supernumerary chromosomes, particularly in rice-infecting isolates. When expressed in M. oryzae, most of the AVR-Pita homologs could elicit Pita-mediated resistance, even those from non-rice isolates. AVR-Pita was flanked by a retrotransposon, which presumably contributed to its multiple translocation across the genome. On the other hand, family member AVR-Pita3, which lacks avirulence activity, was stably located on chromosome 7 in a vast majority of isolates. These results suggest that the diversification in genome location of AVR-Pita in the rice isolates is a consequence of recognition by Pita in rice. We propose a model that the multiple translocation of AVR-Pita may be associated with its frequent loss and recovery mediated by its transfer among individuals in asexual populations. This model implies that the high mobility of AVR-Pita is a key mechanism accounting for the rapid adaptation toward Pita. Dynamic adaptation of some fungal plant pathogens may be achieved by deletion and recovery of avirulence genes using a population as a unit of adaptation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Translocation of Magnaporthe oryzae Effectors into Rice Cells and Their Subsequent Cell-to-Cell Movement.
- Author
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Khang, Chang Hyun, Berruyer, Romain, Giraldo, Martha C., Kankanala, Prasanna, Park, Sook-Young, Czymmek, Kirk, Kang, Seogchan, and Valent, Barbara
- Abstract
Knowledge remains limited about how fungal pathogens that colonize living plant cells translocate effector proteins inside host cells to regulate cellular processes and neutralize defense responses. To cause the globally important rice blast disease, specialized invasive hyphae (IH) invade successive living rice (Oryza sativa) cells while enclosed in host-derived extrainvasive hyphal membrane. Using live-cell imaging, we identified a highly localized structure, the biotrophic interfacial complex (BIC), which accumulates fluorescently labeled effectors secreted by IH. In each newly entered rice cell, effectors were first secreted into BICs at the tips of the initially filamentous hyphae in the cell. These tip BICs were left behind beside the first-differentiated bulbous IH cells as the fungus continued to colonize the host cell. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching experiments showed that the effector protein PWL2 (for prevents pathogenicity toward weeping lovegrass [ Eragrostis curvula ]) continued to accumulate in BICs after IH were growing elsewhere. PWL2 and BAS1 (for biotrophy-associated secreted protein 1), BIC-localized secreted proteins, were translocated into the rice cytoplasm. By contrast, BAS4, which uniformly outlines the IH, was not translocated into the host cytoplasm. Fluorescent PWL2 and BAS1 proteins that reached the rice cytoplasm moved into uninvaded neighbors, presumably preparing host cells before invasion. We report robust assays for elucidating the molecular mechanisms that underpin effector secretion into BICs, translocation to the rice cytoplasm, and cell-to-cell movement in rice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Interaction Transcriptome Analysis Identifies Magnaporthe oryzae BAS1-4 as Biotrophy-Associated Secreted Proteins in Rice Blast Disease.
- Author
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Mosquera, Gloria, Giraldo, Martha C., Khang, Chang Hyun, Coughlan, Sean, and Valent, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
PHYTOPATHOGENIC fungi , *PLANT proteins , *RICE blast disease , *PLANT cellular signal transduction ,RICE genetics - Abstract
Biotrophic invasive hyphae (IH) of the blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae secrete effectors to alter host defenses and cellular processes as they successively invade living rice (Oryza sativa) cells. However, few blast effectors have been identified. Indeed, understanding fungal and rice genes contributing to biotrophic invasion has been difficult because so few plant cells have encountered IH at the earliest infection stages. We developed a robust procedure for isolating infected-rice sheath RNAs in which ∼20% of the RNA originated from IH in first-invaded cells. We analyzed these IH RNAs relative to control mycelial RNAs using M. oryzae oligoarrays. With a 10-fold differential expression threshold, we identified known effector PWL2 and 58 candidate effectors. Four of these candidates were confirmed to be fungal biotrophy- associated secreted (BAS) proteins. Fluorescently labeled BAS proteins were secreted into rice cells in distinct patterns in compatible, but not in incompatible, interactions. BAS1 and BAS2 proteins preferentially accumulated in biotrophic interfacial complexes along with known avirulence effectors, BAS3 showed additional localization near cell wall crossing points, and BAS4 uniformly outlined growing IH. Analysis of the same infected-tissue RNAs with rice oligoarrays identified putative effector-induced rice susceptibility genes, which are highly enriched for sensor-transduction components rather than typically identified defense response genes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The ER Chaperone LHS1 Is Involved in Asexual Development and Rice Infection by the Blast Fungus Magnaporthe oryzae.
- Author
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Mihwa Yi, Myoung-Hwan Chi, Chang Hyun Khang, Sook-Young Park, Seogchan Kang, Valent, Barbara, and Yong-Hwan Lee
- Subjects
- *
MOLECULAR chaperones , *ENDOPLASMIC reticulum , *RICE blast disease , *FUNGAL diseases of plants , *PLANT organelles - Abstract
In planta secretion of fungal pathogen proteins, including effectors destined for the plant cell cytoplasm, is critical for disease progression. However, little is known about the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) secretion mechanisms used by these pathogens. To determine if normal ER function is crucial for fungal pathogenicity, Magnaporthe oryzae genes encoding proteins homologous to yeast Lhs1 p and Kar2p, members of the heat shock protein 70 family in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, were cloned and characterized. Like their yeast counterparts, both LHS1 and KAR2 proteins localized in the ER and functioned in an unfolded protein response (UPR) similar to the yeast UPR. Mutants produced by disruption of LHS1 were viable but showed a defect in the translocation of proteins across the ER membrane and reduced activities of extracellular enzymes. The Δlhs1 mutant was severely impaired not only in conidiation, but also in both penetration and biotrophic invasion in susceptible rice (Oryza sativa) plants. This mutant also had defects in the induction of the Pi-ta resistance gene--mediated hypersensitive response and in the accumulation of fluorescently-labeled secreted effector proteins in biotrophic interfacial complexes. Our results suggest that proper processing of secreted proteins, including effectors, by chaperones in the ER is requisite for successful disease development and for determining host-pathogen compatibility via the gene-for-gene interaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
35. Quantitative and Qualitative Influence of Inoculation Methods on In Planta Growth of Rice Blast Fungus.
- Author
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Berruyer, Romain, Poussier, Stéphane, Kankanala, Prasanna, Mosquera, Gloria, and Valent, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
RICE blast disease , *RICE diseases & pests , *PLANT cells & tissues , *PLANT diseases , *PLANT growth , *PLANT anatomy - Abstract
Molecular analyses of early disease events require infected plant tissue in which the pathogen is present in high quantities and interacts with the plant in a way found in the field. In this study, a quantitative polymerase chain reaction (Q-PCR) assay was developed to determine an "infection ratio" of fungal to plant cells in infected tissues. This assay was used to evaluate four inoculation methods (spray, mist, dip, and sheath) as well as use of whole plants or excised parts. Fluorescence stereomicroscopy was used to follow individual lesions developing from appressoria to macroscopic symptoms. Disease progression and outcomes were documented from 24 to 96 h postinoculation (hpi), as well as effectiveness of Pi-ta-mediated resistance. Even at 96 hpi, fungus proliferated well ahead of visible plant damage, especially in veins. Developing lesions sometimes were surrounded by greener areas in detached leaves. Spray inoculation was not sufficient for detecting fungal gene expression in planta before 96 h. Alternatively, a leaf sheath assay produced infected tissues containing 10 to 30% fungal DNA by 34 h. Used together, Q-PCR quantification and fluorescence stereomicroscopy will facilitate studies of early plant invasion because infection density and fungal growth stages are directly observed, not assumed from incubation time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Natural Variation at the Pi-ta Rice Resistance Locus.
- Author
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Yulin Jia, Bryan, Gregory T., Farrall, Leonard, and Valent, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
RICE blast disease , *RICE diseases & pests - Abstract
The resistance gene Pi-ta protects rice crops against the fungal pathogen Magnaporthe grisea expressing the avirulence gene AVR-Pita in a gene-for-gene manner. Pi-ta, originally introgressed into japonica rice from indica origin, was previously isolated by positional cloning. In this study, we report the nucleotide sequence of a 5,113-base pair region containing a japonica susceptibility pi-ta allele, which has overall 99.6% nucleotide identity to the indica Pi-ta allele conferring resistance. The intron region shows the levels of sequence diversity that typically differentiate genes from indica and japonica rices, but the other gene regions show less diversity. Sequences of the Pi-ta allele from resistant cultivars Katy and Drew from the southern United States are identical to the resistance Pi-ta sequence. Sequences from susceptible cultivars El Paso 144 and Cica 9 from Latin America define a third susceptibility haplotype. This brings the total number of Pi-ta haplotypes identified to four, including the resistance allele and three susceptibility alleles. The Pi-ta locus shows low levels of DNA polymorphism compared with other analyzed R genes. Understanding the natural diversity at the Pi-ta locus is important for designing specific markers for incorporation of this R gene into ricebreeding programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. A Structural Account of Substrate and Inhibitor Specificity Differences between Two Naphthol...
- Author
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Der-Ing Liao, Thompson, James E., Fahnestock, Stephen, Valent, Barbara, and Jordan, Douglas B.
- Subjects
- *
NAD(P)H dehydrogenases , *ENZYME inhibitors , *AMINO acid sequence - Abstract
Presents an X-ray structure of 1,3,6,8-tetrahydroxynaphthalene reductase complexed with NADPH and pyroquilon for examining substrate and inhibitor specificities that differ from those of 1,3,8-trihydroxynaphthalene reductase. Comparison of the sequences of the two dehydrogenase/reductases; Development of models onto the pyroquilin cyclic structure.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Direct interaction of resistance gene and avirulence gene products confers rice blast resistance.
- Author
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Jia, Yulin, McAdams, Sean A., Bryan, Gregory T., Hershey, Howard P., and Valent, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
PYRICULARIA grisea , *RICE blast disease , *MOLECULAR biology , *BINDING sites , *BIOCHEMISTRY , *PLANT cells & tissues , *GENETICS - Abstract
Rice expressing the Pi-ta gene is resistant to strains of the rice blast fungus, Magnaporthe grisea, expressing AVR-Pita in a gene-for-gent relationship. Pi-ta encodes a putative cytoplasmic receptor with a centrally localized nucleotide-binding site and leucine-rich domain (LRD) at the C-terminus. AVR-Pita is predicted to encode a metalloprotease with an N-terminal secretary signal and pro-protein sequences. AVR-Pita176 lacks the secretary and proprotein sequences. We report here that transient expression of AVR-Pita176 inside plant cells results in a Pi-ta-dependent resistance response. AVR-Pita176 protein is shown to bind specifically to the LRD of the Pi-ta protein, both in the yeast two-hybrid system and in an in vitro binding assay. Single amino acid substitutions in the Pi-ta LRD or in the AVR-Pita176 protease motif that result in loss of resistance in the plant also disrupt the physical interaction, both in yeast and in vitro. These data suggest that the AVR-Pita176 protein binds directly to the Pi-ta LRD region inside the plant cell to initiate a Pi-ta-mediated defense response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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