Detailseite
Projekt Druckansicht

The early infection phase of Ustilago maydis: adaption to the plant environment

Fachliche Zuordnung Organismische Interaktionen, chemische Ökologie und Mikrobiome pflanzlicher Systeme
Pflanzenzüchtung, Pflanzenpathologie
Förderung Förderung von 2009 bis 2012
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 15847441
 
Erstellungsjahr 2013

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

In this project, different aspects of the early phase of the biotrophic interaction of maize and U. maydis have been studied. A preliminary transcriptome analysis revealed that the initial defense response of maize that is induced upon inoculation of U. maydis is suppressed when biotrophy is established immediately upon epidermal penetration. Based on this observation, we hypothesized that compatibility in this biotrophic interaction depends on an active suppression of plant immunity by the pathogen. In this context, the main goals of this project were i) to identify and functionally characterize novel compatibility factors in the maize – U. maydis interaction, and ii) to study the programmed cell death responses during incompatible Ustilago-interactions. To identify maize genes that act as susceptibility factors in the U. maydis interaction, a virus induced gene silencing (VIGS) protocol was established that allows systemic gene silencing in U. maydis infected maize plants and a correlation of gene-silencing efficiency and fungal growth. This approach identified the conserved suppressor of apoptotic cell death, Bax-Inhibitor-1 (BI-1) as a compatibility factor in the maize-U. maydis interaction. Complementary, the maize terpene-synthase TPS6/11 was found to restrict fungal virulence, i.e. its silencing caused an increased susceptibility of maize to U. maydis. A novel maize compatibility factor being identified in this study is corn cystatin-9 (CC9). This apoplastic protein is an inhibitor of papain-like cysteine proteases. Silencing of cc9 causes resistance of maize to U. maydis infection, which coincides with an HR-like epidermal defense response and the transcriptional activation of SA-marker genes. This drastic phenotype could be explained by functional analysis of the CC9-targeted proteases, which revealed a central role of these apoplastic enzymes in the activation of SA-associated defense signaling in maize. Regulation of epidermal cell death was studied in barley, where infection with the maize pathogen U. maydis causes an epidermal cell death response. This defense response was partially suppressed in barley plant overexpressing BI-1. By contrast, epidermal cell death caused by Ustilago mutants deleted for the secreted effector Pep1 were not influence by BI-1, which suggests distinct programs of cell death being activated in the two types of incompatible interactions. This assumption could be substantiated by enzyme essays, transcriptional analyses and life-cell as well as transmission electron microscopy. Together, these analyses revealed hallmarks for apoptotic cell death being activated in the non-host interaction, while ∆pep1 mutants cause an apoplastic oxidative burst that induces autophagy rather than apoptosis-like cell death.

Projektbezogene Publikationen (Auswahl)

 
 

Zusatzinformationen

Textvergrößerung und Kontrastanpassung