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The important role of the cytoskeletal scaffold is increasingly recognized in host-pathogen interactions. The cytoskeleton potentially functions as a weapon for both the plants defending themselves against fungal or oomycete parasites, and for the pathogens trying to overcome the resisting barrier of the plants. This concept, however, had not been investigated in marine algae so far. We are opening this scientific chapter with our study on the functional implications of the cytoskeleton in 3 filamentous brown algal species infected by the marine oomycete Eurychasma dicksonii. Our observations suggest that the cytoskeleton is involved in host defense responses and in fundamental developmental stages of E. dicksonii in its algal host.Oomycetes are important plant and animal pathogens and are the cause of significant crop losses every year. Hence, a plethora of studies with different cultivated and model plant species investigate the diversity of parasite infection pathways and host defense responses.1 However, little information is available on the interactions between algae and marine oomycetes, despite the epidemic outbreaks reported2 and the huge impact on intensive algal aquaculture.3Eurychasma dicksonii is a biotrophic, intracellular marine oomycete, capable to infect at least 45 species of brown seaweeds in laboratory cultures.4 Molecular data reveal that E. dicksonii has a basal phylogenetic position in the oomycete lineage.5,6 The basic stages of the infection are known: the attachment of the parasite spore to the host cell wall, the penetration of its cytoplasm into the host cell, the formation of a multinucleated, unwalled thallus, and zoosporogenesis.6 Hitherto, though, there was no knowledge about the role of cytoskeleton in the context of infection, which stimulated our research.In land plants, reorganization of the cytoskeleton is part of the reaction to infection by fungal pathogens. The rearrangement of the cytoplasm and the relocation of the nuclei and other organelles are accompanied by rapid rearrangements of the cytoskeletal elements.7 The plant cytoskeleton shows an extreme plasticity in order to serve the intracellular realignment.At the same time, this indicates that the plant cytoskeleton could be the parasite’s target by producing anti-cytoskeletal compounds in an effort to overcome plant resistance, a mechanism known in several fungal and oomycete pathogens of higher plants.8,9Consequently, the changes in microtubule (MT) organization are associated with both the plant defense and/or susceptibility toward oomycetes, respectively.10 Therefore, our research on the organization and role of cytoskeleton in the host and the parasite sheds some light into the enormous variability in the specificity of the recognition, defense, and infection mechanisms.  相似文献   
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Oomycete diseases in seaweeds are probably widespread and of significant ecological and economic impact, but overall still poorly understood. This study investigates the organisation of the cytoskeleton during infection of three brown algal species, Pylaiella littoralis, Ectocarpus siliculosus, and Ectocarpus crouaniorum, by the basal marine oomycete Eurychasma dicksonii. Immunofluorescence staining of tubulin revealed how the development of this intracellular biotrophic pathogen impacts on microtubule (MT) organisation of its algal host. The host MT cytoskeleton remains normal and organised by the centrosome until very late stages of the infection. Additionally, the organisation of the parasite's cytoskeleton was examined. During mitosis of the E. dicksonii nucleus the MT focal point (microtubule organisation centre, MTOC, putative centrosome) duplicates and each daughter MTOC migrates to opposite poles of the nucleus. This similarity in MT organisation between the host and pathogen reflects the relatively close phylogenetic relationship between oomycetes and brown algae. Moreover, actin labelling with rhodamine‐phalloidin in E. dicksonii revealed typical images of actin dots connected by fine actin filament bundles in the cortical cytoplasm. The functional and phylogenetic implications of our observations are discussed.  相似文献   
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SARS Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) emerged in late 2019, leading to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic that continues to cause significant global mortality in human populations. Given its sequence similarity to SARS-CoV, as well as related coronaviruses circulating in bats, SARS-CoV-2 is thought to have originated in Chiroptera species in China. However, whether the virus spread directly to humans or through an intermediate host is currently unclear, as is the potential for this virus to infect companion animals, livestock, and wildlife that could act as viral reservoirs. Using a combination of surrogate entry assays and live virus, we demonstrate that, in addition to human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), the Spike glycoprotein of SARS-CoV-2 has a broad host tropism for mammalian ACE2 receptors, despite divergence in the amino acids at the Spike receptor binding site on these proteins. Of the 22 different hosts we investigated, ACE2 proteins from dog, cat, and cattle were the most permissive to SARS-CoV-2, while bat and bird ACE2 proteins were the least efficiently used receptors. The absence of a significant tropism for any of the 3 genetically distinct bat ACE2 proteins we examined indicates that SARS-CoV-2 receptor usage likely shifted during zoonotic transmission from bats into people, possibly in an intermediate reservoir. Comparison of SARS-CoV-2 receptor usage to the related coronaviruses SARS-CoV and RaTG13 identified distinct tropisms, with the 2 human viruses being more closely aligned. Finally, using bioinformatics, structural data, and targeted mutagenesis, we identified amino acid residues within the Spike–ACE2 interface, which may have played a pivotal role in the emergence of SARS-CoV-2 in humans. The apparently broad tropism of SARS-CoV-2 at the point of viral entry confirms the potential risk of infection to a wide range of companion animals, livestock, and wildlife.

A study using a combination of surrogate entry assays and live virus suggests that SARS-CoV-2 may have a broad host-range, revealing that the virus''s spike protein can use a broad range of host ACE2 receptors to enter cells and that the sequence of this protein might have changed during the zoonotic jump into humans.  相似文献   
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