Abstract

Rice false smut fungus which is a biotrophic fungal pathogen causes an important rice disease and brings a severe damage where rice is cultivated. We established a new fungal-plant pathosystem where Ustilaginoidea virens was able to interact compatibly with the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Disease symptoms were apparent on the leaves of the plants after 6 days of post inoculation in the form of chlorosis. Cytological studies showed that U. virens caused a heavy infestation inside the cells of the chlorotic tissues. Development and colonization of aerial mycelia in association with floral organ, particularly on anther and stigma of the flowers after 3 weeks of post inoculation was evident which finally caused infection on the developing seeds and pod tissues. The fungus adopts a uniquely biotrophic infection strategy in roots and spreads without causing a loss of host cell viability. We have also demonstrated that U. virens isolates infect Arabidopsis and the plant subsequently activates different defense response mechanisms which are witnessed by the expression of pathogenesis-related genes, PR-1, PR-2, PR-5, PDF1.1, and PDF1.2. The established A. thaliana–U. virens pathosystem will now permit various follow-up molecular genetics and gene expression experiments to be performed to identify the defense signals and responses that restrict fungal hyphae colonization in planta and also provide initial evidence for tissue-adapted fungal infection strategies.

Highlights

  • Rice (Oryza sativa) false smut disease, caused by the the pathogenic ascomycete fungus Ustilaginoidea virens (Cooke) Tak is one of the most severe and devastating diseases of rice, which feeds one-half of the world’s population (Ford et al, 1994; Talbot and Foster, 2001)

  • The transformed U. virens isolate tagged with both GFP and GUS marker genes was detected in infected Arabidopsis leaf tissues (Figures 1a,b)

  • Conidia were able to attach and germinate on the surface of the leaves several hours after inoculation and at 48 hpi where the biotrophic hyphae can only exist, a large amount of mycelium with many branches developed on the surface of the leaf (Figures 1c and 2c)

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Summary

Introduction

Rice (Oryza sativa) false smut disease, caused by the the pathogenic ascomycete fungus Ustilaginoidea virens (Cooke) Tak (teleomorph: Villosiclava virens) is one of the most severe and devastating diseases of rice, which feeds one-half of the world’s population (Ford et al, 1994; Talbot and Foster, 2001). Since the hyphae extend into the central vascular tissues, this fungus is considered to be a biotrophic parasite (Tang et al, 2013). The infection process of U. virens was recently investigated through extensive histological and microscopic examinations (Tang et al, 2013; Wenlu et al, 2013; Mebeaselassie et al, 2015a). The pathogen has showed a decreased gene inventories for different metabolisms including nutrient uptake and polysaccharide degradation. This could arise possibly due to the adaptation of the pathogen to the specific floret infection and biotrophic lifestyles

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