Abstract
The ultrastructure and composition of the extracellular matrices (ECMs) associated with germ tubes and appressoria ofColletotrichum lindemuthianum have been examined. Flexuous fibres (fimbriae), up to 6 μm long and 4–30 nm in diameter, protruded from the surface of germ tubes and appressoria. Anionic colloidal gold and lectin cytochemistry showed that ECMs of germ tubes and appressoria contain basic proteins, α-D-mannose and α-D-galactose residues. A monoclonal antibody, UB26, was raised to infection structures isolated from leaves ofPhaseolus vulgaris infected withC. lindemuthianum. UB26 recognised a protein epitope on two glycoproteins (Mr 133,000 and 146,000). Reductions in the Mr of these proteins after treatment with peptide-N-glycosidase and trifluoromethane sulphonic acid suggest that they carry N- and O-linked side-chains. Immunofluorescence and EM-immunogold labelling showed that glycoproteins recognised by UB26 were restricted to the ECMs around germ tubes and appressoria but fimbriae were not labelled. Unlike appressorial germ tubes formed in vitro, intracellular infection hyphae were not labelled, suggesting that the glycoproteins recognised by UB26 are not present on fungal structures formed within host cells. In liquid culture, these glycoproteins were not released into the medium, suggesting they are physically linked to the cell wall. Also, the glycoproteins were not removed from glass surfaces by ultrasonication. These results suggest that glycoproteins recognised by UB26 may be involved in the adhesion of germ tubes and appressoria to substrata. Our results show that the ECMs of germ tubes and appressoria differ markedly in structure and composition from those of conidia and intracellular hyphae, and that extracellular glycoproteins are associated with specific regions of the fungal cell surface.
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