Abstract

The blast fungus initiates infection using a heavily melanized, dome-shaped infection structure known as the appressorium, which forcibly ruptures the cuticle to enter the rice leaf tissue. How this process takes place remains not fully understood. Here, we used untargeted metabolomics analyses to profile the metabolome of developing appressoria and identified significant changes in six key metabolic pathways, including early sphingolipid biosynthesis. Analyses employing small molecule inhibitors, gene disruption, or genetic and chemical complementation demonstrated that ceramide compounds of the sphingolipid biosynthesis pathway are essential for normal appressorial development controlled by mitosis. In addition, ceramide was found to act upstream from the protein kinase C-mediated cell wall integrity pathway during appressorium repolarization and pathogenicity in rice blast. Further discovery of the sphingolipid biosynthesis pathway revealed that glucosylceramide (GlcCer) synthesized by ceramide is the key substance affecting the pathogenicity of Magnaporthe oryzae Our results provide new insights into the chemical moieties involved in the infection-related signaling networks, thereby revealing a potential target for the development of novel control agents against the major disease of rice and other cereals.IMPORTANCE Our untargeted analysis of metabolomics throughout the course of pathogenic development gave us an unprecedented high-resolution view of major shifts in metabolism that occur in the topmost fungal pathogen that infects rice, wheat, barley, and millet. Guided by these metabolic insights, we demonstrated their practical application by using two different small-molecule inhibitors of sphingolipid biosynthesis enzymes to successfully block the pathogenicity of M. oryzae Our study thus defines the sphingolipid biosynthesis pathway as a key step and potential target that can be exploited for the development of antifungal agents. Furthermore, future investigations that exploit such important metabolic intermediates will further deepen our basic understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying the establishment of fungal blast disease in important cereal crops.

Highlights

  • The blast fungus initiates infection using a heavily melanized, domeshaped infection structure known as the appressorium, which forcibly ruptures the cuticle to enter the rice leaf tissue

  • Our study further demonstrated that the abnormal morphology of appressoria caused by lack of ceramides is related to cell cycle regulation and that ceramide acts upstream from protein kinase C signaling, which is essential for pathogenicity, thereby demonstrating that early sphingolipids are indispensable for the initiation of the devastating blast disease in rice

  • Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and liquid chromatography (LC)-MS analyses yielded a total of 10,344 ion signals (9,631 by LC-MS and 713 by gas chromatograph (GC)-MS)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The blast fungus initiates infection using a heavily melanized, domeshaped infection structure known as the appressorium, which forcibly ruptures the cuticle to enter the rice leaf tissue How this process takes place remains not fully understood. IMPORTANCE Our untargeted analysis of metabolomics throughout the course of pathogenic development gave us an unprecedented high-resolution view of major shifts in metabolism that occur in the topmost fungal pathogen that infects rice, wheat, barley, and millet. Guided by these metabolic insights, we demonstrated their practical application by using two different small-molecule inhibitors of sphingolipid biosynthesis enzymes to successfully block the pathogenicity of M. oryzae. As it presents cellular information that is downstream from genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics data, metabolomics is widely held to represent the most representative phenotype of an organism in a given context [28]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call