Abstract

Fusarium head blight caused by Fusarium graminearum is an important disease of wheat and barley. Previous studies have showed that all three MAP kinase genes, MGV1, FgHOG1, and GPMK1, are involved in regulating hyphal growth, sexual reproduction, plant infection, and stress responses in this pathogen. To determine the relationship between the Mgv1 and FgHog1 pathways, in this study, we generated and characterized the mgv1 Fghog1 double mutant. Deletion of FgHOG1 partially rescued the defects of the mgv1 mutant in vegetative growth and cell wall integrity but had no effects on its defects in plant infection and DON production. The mgv1 Fghog1 mutant grew faster and was more tolerant to cell wall stressors than the mgv1 mutant. Swollen compartments and cell burst were observed frequently in the mgv1 mutant but rarely in the mgv1 Fghog1 mutant when treated with fungicide fludioxonil or cell wall stressor Congo red. Conversely, the deletion of MGV1 also alleviated the hyperosmotic sensitivity of the Fghog1 mutant in vegetative growth. TGY assays indicated increased phosphorylation of FgHog1 in the mgv1 mutant, and TEY assays further revealed elevated activation of Gpmk1 in the mgv1 Fghog1 double mutant, particularly under cell wall stress conditions. Overall, our data showed that deletion of FgHOG1 partially suppressed the defects of the mgv1 mutant, possibly by affecting genes related to cell wall integrity and osmoregulation via the over-activation of Gpmk1 MAP kinase and avoiding intracellular turgor elevation.

Highlights

  • Fusarium head blight, a devastating disease of wheat and barley, is caused by the filamentous ascomycete Fusarium graminearum

  • When assayed with race tube cultures grown on CM, the mgv1 mutant grew at approximately 2.7 mm/day, but the growth rate of the mgv1 Fghog1 mutant was over 4.0 mm/day (Table 1), which was approximately a 48% increase in comparison with mgv1

  • These results indicate that deletion of FgHOG1 partially suppressed the growth defect of the mgv1 mutant

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Summary

Introduction

A devastating disease of wheat and barley, is caused by the filamentous ascomycete Fusarium graminearum. F. graminearum causes stalk and ear rots on maize and infects other small grains (Bai and Shaner, 2004; Goswami and Kistler, 2004). Functional Relationship Between Mgv and FgHog perithecia on plant debris. Ascospores discharged from perithecia are the primary inoculum to infect flowering wheat heads (Trail, 2009). F. graminearum produces asexual spores known as conidia that are infectious and important for pathogen spreading

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