Abstract

Heat shock protein Hsp104, a homolog of the bacterial chaperone ClpB and plant Hsp100, plays an essential part in the response to heat and various chemical agents in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. However, their functions remain largely unknown in plant fungal pathogens. Here, we report the identification and functional characterization of a plausible ortholog of yeast Hsp104 in Fusarium pseudograminearum, which we termed FpHsp104. Deletion mutant of FpHsp104 displayed severe defects in the resistance of heat shock during F. pseudograminearum mycelia and conidia when exposed to extreme heat. We also found that the protein showed dynamic localization to small particles under high temperature. However, no significant differences were detected in osmotic, oxidative, or cell wall stress responses between the wild-type and Δfphsp104 strains. Quantitative real-time PCR analysis showed that FpHsp104 was upregulated in the conidia, and disruption of FpHsp104 gene resulted in defects in conidia production, morphology, and germination. The transcript levels of conidiation-related genes of FpFluG, FpVosA, FpWetA, and FpAbaA were reduced in the Δfphsp104 mutant vs. the wild-type strain, but heat-shocked mRNA splicing repair was not affected in Δfphsp104. Moreover, Δfphsp104 mutant also showed attenuated virulence, but its DON synthesis was normal. These data from the first study of Hsp104 in F. pseudograminearum strongly suggest that FpHsp104 gene is an important element in the heat tolerance, development, and pathogenicity processes of F. pseudograminearum.

Highlights

  • Fusarium pseudograminearum is a soil-borne plant pathogen that causes Fusarium crown rot (FCR) in wheat and barley

  • The Hsp104 from F. graminearum and that of F. pseudograminearum had the closest genetic relationship, and the Hsp104 protein sequences from filamentous fungi were classified into a separate cluster from those from the unicellular fungal S. cerevisiae

  • To determine whether the function of FpHsp104 is associated with growth and morphogenesis in F. pseudograminearum, we investigated growth rates and colony morphology on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and MM media

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Summary

Introduction

Fusarium pseudograminearum is a soil-borne plant pathogen that causes Fusarium crown rot (FCR) in wheat and barley. F. pseudograminearum is a hemibiotrophic pathogen, and its most common route of infection of wheat is initiated at the coleoptile by mycelia and spores in soil. F. pseudograminearum can produce numerous bioactive secondary metabolites (Blum et al, 2019; Wollenberg et al, 2019; Kang et al, 2020). The type-B trichothecene DON (3-acetyl and 15-acetyl-deoxynivalenol) is an important metabolite produced during infection (Tunali et al, 2012; Obanor and Chakraborty, 2014). F. pseudograminearum can cause Fusarium head blight in wheat, especially under warm and humid conditions (Obanor et al, 2013)

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