Abstract

Sirodesmin, the major secondary metabolite produced by the plant pathogenic fungus Leptosphaeria maculans in vitro, has been linked to disease on Brassica species since the 1970s, and yet its role has remained ambiguous. Re-examination of gene expression data revealed that all previously described genes and two newly identified genes within the sir gene cluster in the genome are down-regulated during the crucial early establishment stages of blackleg disease on Brassica napus. To test if this is a strategy employed by the fungus to avoid damage to and then detection by the host plant during the L. maculans asymptomatic biotrophic phase, sirodesmin was produced constitutively by overexpressing the sirZ gene encoding the transcription factor that coordinates the regulation of the other genes in the sir cluster. The sirZ over-expression strains had a major reduction in pathogenicity. Mutation of the over-expression construct restored pathogenicity. However, mutation of two genes, sirP and sirG, required for specific steps in the sirodesmin biosynthesis pathway, in the sirZ over-expression background resulted in strains that were unable to synthesize sirodesmin, yet were still non-pathogenic. Elucidating the basis for this pathogenicity defect or finding ways to overexpress sirZ during disease may provide new strategies for the control of blackleg disease.

Highlights

  • The genes for sirodesmin biosynthesis are down-regulated during the foliar stages of blackleg disease

  • The transcription factor SirZ, which regulates the synthesis of the major secondary metabolite produced by L. maculans [8, 9], was constitutively expressed and this blocked pathogenicity in cotyledon infection assays (Fig 4)

  • In vitro the SirZ constitutive expression strains had slower radial growth rates compared to the wild type, which may reflect autotoxicity (Fig 6)

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Summary

Introduction

The third gene studied here encodes the putative transcription factor SirZ, which is required for regulating the expression of the genes in the sir cluster [8, 9]. Generated RNA-sequencing data were used to examine the expression of genes in the sirodesmin biosynthesis cluster. Over expression of SirZ prevents blackleg disease and AU31, respectively, and cloned into the BglII site of PLAU2 for the transformation of L. maculans to create control strains.

Results
Conclusion
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