Abstract

BackgroundCercospora leaf spot disease, caused by the fungus Cercospora beticola, is the most destructive foliar disease of sugar beets (Beta vulgaris) worldwide. Cercosporin, a light-inducible toxin, is essential for necrosis of the leaf tissue and development of the typical leaf spots on sugar beet leaves.ResultsIn this study we show that the O-methyltransferase gene CTB2 is essential for cercosporin production and pathogenicity in two C. beticola isolates. We established a transformation system for C. beticola protoplasts, disrupted CTB2, and transformed the Δctb2 strains as well as a wild type strain with the DsRed reporter gene. The Δctb2 strains had lost their pigmentation and toxin measurements demonstrated that the Δctb2 strains were defective in cercosporin production. Infection of sugar beets with the wild type and Δctb2 DsRed strains showed that the deletion strain was severely impaired in plant infection. Histological analysis revealed that the CTB2-deficient isolate cannot enter the leaf tissue through stomata like the wild type.ConclusionsTaken together, these observations indicate that cercosporin has a dual function in sugar beet infection: in addition to the well-known role in tissue necrosis, the toxin is required for the early phase of sugar beet infection.

Highlights

  • Cercospora leaf spot disease, caused by the fungus Cercospora beticola, is the most destructive foliar disease of sugar beets (Beta vulgaris) worldwide

  • Disruption of CTB2 in the fungal isolates Ahlburg and Ferrara Primers were designed using the homologous sequence from C. nicotianae

  • We showed that the O-methyltransferase gene CTB2 is essential for cercosporin biosynthesis and fungal virulence of C. beticola

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Summary

Introduction

Cercospora leaf spot disease, caused by the fungus Cercospora beticola, is the most destructive foliar disease of sugar beets (Beta vulgaris) worldwide. Cercosporin, a light-inducible toxin, is essential for necrosis of the leaf tissue and development of the typical leaf spots on sugar beet leaves. Cercospora beticola, an ascomycete, is the economically most important foliar pathogen of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris). Characteristic symptoms of C. beticola infection include brown leaf spots extending from the adaxial to the abaxial sides of the leaf; from spring to summer the spots increase in number as the disease progresses, coalescing such that the entire leaf turns brown and shrinks. Leaf spot disease is economically critical because the destruction of the leaves limits photosynthesis and compromises yield [1]. C. beticola is a hemibiotrophic fungus with biotrophic and necrotrophic phases. 3-4 days after inoculation, the fungus enters the host through open stomata [3]; after penetration, fungal hyphae grow intercellularly and colonize

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