Abstract

The rice blast fungus, Magnaporthe grisea, forms a dome-shaped and darkly pigmented infection structure, an appressorium, to penetrate its host. Differentiation and maturation of appressoria are critical steps for successful infection. A spontaneous developmental mutant (MG01) defective in appressorium formation was found in this fungus. The mutant did not form appressoria either on inductive hydrophobic surfaces or on rice leaves. The addition of cyclic AMP or 1,16-hexadecanediol was not effective in inducing appressorium formation in this mutant. This mutant did not cause lesions on rice when inoculated with conidial suspension by spraying or injecting into the leaf sheath. Genetic analysis of the mutant indicated that the phenotype is under single gene control, designated APP5. Crosses with previously described appressorium defective mutants ( app1 − and app3 −) of Magnaporthe grisea suggested that the mutations are at different loci. Bulked segregant analysis was employed to obtain DNA markers linked to the APP5 locus.

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