Abstract

Magnaporthe oryzae is the causal agent of rice blast disease, the most widespread and serious disease of cultivated rice. Live cell imaging and quantitative 4D image analysis have provided new insight into the mechanisms by which the fungus infects host cells and spreads rapidly in plant tissue. In this video review article, we apply live cell imaging approaches to understanding the cell and developmental biology of rice blast disease. To gain entry to host plants, M. oryzae develops a specialised infection structure called an appressorium, a unicellular dome-shaped cell which generates enormous turgor, translated into mechanical force to rupture the leaf cuticle. Appressorium development is induced by perception of the hydrophobic leaf surface and nutrient deprivation. Cargo-independent autophagy in the three-celled conidium, controlled by cell cycle regulation, is essential for appressorium morphogenesis. Appressorium maturation involves turgor generation and melanin pigment deposition in the appressorial cell wall. Once a threshold of turgor has been reached, this triggers re-polarisation which requires regulated generation of reactive oxygen species, to facilitate septin GTPase-dependent cytoskeletal re-organisation and re-polarisation of the appressorium to form a narrow, rigid penetration peg. Infection of host tissue requires a further morphogenetic transition to a pseudohyphal-type of growth within colonised rice cells. At the same time the fungus secretes an arsenal of effector proteins to suppress plant immunity. Many effectors are secreted into host cells directly, which involves a specific secretory pathway and a specialised structure called the biotrophic interfacial complex. Cell-to-cell spread of the fungus then requires development of a specialised structure, the transpressorium, that is used to traverse pit field sites, allowing the fungus to maintain host cell membrane integrity as new living plant cells are invaded. Thereafter, the fungus rapidly moves through plant tissue and host cells begin to die, as the fungus switches to necrotrophic growth and disease symptoms develop. These morphogenetic transitions are reviewed in the context of live cell imaging studies.

Highlights

  • The blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae [1] is able to infect more than 50 different grass species, including staple crops such as rice, millets and barley [2]

  • We describe the manner in which M. oryzae re-models its cytoskeleton during appressorium maturation, leading to formation of the rigid penetration peg, which ruptures the leaf cuticle

  • The Pmk1 MAP kinase signalling pathway regulates appressorium morphogenesis The development of appressoria in response to the hard, hydrophobic leaf surface and absence of exogenous nutrients requires the Pmk1 MAP kinase signalling pathway, which is critical to invasive growth by M. oryzae [30], a function conserved in many diverse pathogenic fungal species [31]

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Summary

Introduction

The blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae (synonym of Pyricularia oryzae) [1] is able to infect more than 50 different grass species, including staple crops such as rice, millets and barley [2]. Cell cycle control and regulated autophagy are necessary for appressorium formation Conidia of M. oryzae germinate rapidly on the leaf surface, forming a polarised germ tube within two hours of contact with a hydrophobic surface. The Pmk1 MAP kinase signalling pathway regulates appressorium morphogenesis The development of appressoria in response to the hard, hydrophobic leaf surface and absence of exogenous nutrients requires the Pmk1 MAP kinase signalling pathway, which is critical to invasive growth by M. oryzae [30], a function conserved in many diverse pathogenic fungal species [31].

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