Abstract

BackgroundAspergillus terreus is one of the most harmful filamentous fungal pathogen of humans, animals and plants. Recently, researchers have discovered that A. terreus can cause foliar blight disease in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.). We used light and scanning electron microscopy, and performed proteomics analysis in an attempt to dissect the invasion process of A. terreus in this important crop.ResultsMicroscopic study revealed that invasion of leaf tissue is marked by rapid germination of A. terreus phialidic conidia (PC) by 4 h after inoculation. By 8 h after inoculation, primary germ tubes from PC differentiated into irregular protuberance, often displayed stomata atropism, and failed to penetrate via the epidermal cells. Colonization of leaf tissues was associated with high rate of production of accessory conidia (AC). These analyses showed the occurrence of a unique opposing pattern of AC, tissue-specific and produced on melanized colonizing hyphae during the infection of leaf tissue. A significant proteome change hallmarked by differential expression of class I patatin, lipoxygenase, catalase-peroxidase complex, and cysteine proteinase inhibitor were observed during tuber colonization. These proteins are often involved in signal transduction pathways and crosstalk in pathogenic responses.ConclusionA. terreus abundantly produced AC and multipolar germinating PC to invade potato leaf tissue. Additionally, A. terreus differentially induced enzymes in potato tuber during colonization which facilitates rapid disease development.

Highlights

  • Aspergillus terreus is one of the most harmful filamentous fungal pathogen of humans, animals and plants

  • Phylogenetic placement of the studied strain By comparing at the level of calmodulin (Cmd) locus, our strain of A. terreus (GenBank® accession number KC305600) with reference strains available at NCBI nucleotide data base, a total of 109 patterns out of a total of 729 sites were found and 670 sites were without single nucleotide polymorphism (92.48%)

  • It was observed that phialidic conidia (PC) stayed inert on potato leaf for 2 h after inoculation (Figure 2A)

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Summary

Introduction

Aspergillus terreus is one of the most harmful filamentous fungal pathogen of humans, animals and plants. Researchers have discovered that A. terreus can cause foliar blight disease in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.). Despite the vast studies on invasive aspergillosis [6,7,8,9], the mode of colonization of plant host by Aspergillus species is poorly understood. A. terreus is shown to cause root rot diseases in wheat and Lolium species [14]. Foliar blight caused by A. terreus amounts to 30-60% of the total leaf surface [15,16], but the infection process is not elucidated. We set as objective to study the infection process of potato by A. terreus

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