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1.
Phytophthora cinnamomi occurs worldwide and has a host range in excess of 1,000 plant species. Avocados (Persea americana Mill) have been described as highly susceptible to this soil-borne pathogen. Here, the regulation of defence responses in avocado root seedlings inoculated with P. cinnamomi mycelia is described. A burst of reactive oxygen species (ROS) was observed 4 days after inoculation. The higher physiological concentration of H2O2 induced by P. cinnamomi on avocado roots had no effect on in vitro growth of the oomycete. Total phenols and epicathecin content showed a significant decrease, but lignin and pyocianidins exhibited no changes after inoculation. Also, increased nitric oxide (NO) production was observed 72 h after treatment. We studied the effects of one NO donor [sodium nitroprusside (SNP)], and one NO scavenger [2- to 4-carboxyphenyl-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazole-1-oxyl-3-oxide (CPTIO)] to determine the role of NO during root colonisation by P. cinnamomi mycelia. Pretreatment of the roots with CPTIO, but not with SNP, inhibited root colonisation suggesting an important role for NO production during the avocado–P. cinnamomi interaction. Our data suggest that although defence responses are activated in avocado roots in response to P. cinnamomi infection, these are not sufficient to avoid pathogen invasion.  相似文献   

2.
Feral pigs have long been implicated as potential vectors in the spread of the devastating plant pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi due to their rooting and wallowing activities which may predispose them as vectors of infested soil. In this study, we aim to determine whether feral pigs have the potential to act as vectors of plant pathogens such as P. cinnamomi through their feeding activity. The typically omnivorous diet of feral pigs may also lead to the passage of P. cinnamomi infected plant material through their digestive system. This study investigates the potential for feral pigs to pass viable P. cinnamomi in their faeces following the ingestion of millet seeds, pine plugs and Banksia leptophilia roots inoculated with P. cinnamomi. Recovery rates of P. cinnamomi from the millet seeds, pine plugs and B. leptophilia roots following a single ingested bolus were 33.2, 94.9 and 10.4 %, respectively supported by quantitative PCR analysis. These results demonstrate that P. cinnamomi remain viable within infected plant material following passage through the pig digestive tract, although the digestive processes reduce the pathogen’s viability. An inverse relationship was observed between the viability of infected material and passage time, suggesting that partially digested plant material provides protection for P. cinnamomi against the adverse environmental conditions of the pig digestive tract. Phytophthora cinnamomi remained viable for up to 7 days in larger pieces of colonised woody plant material such as the pine plugs. A plant infection trial using passaged P. cinnamomi colonised pine plugs showed that even material that remained in the digestive tract for 7 days was capable of infecting and killing healthy plants, susceptible to P. cinnamomi. This study provides compelling evidence that feral pigs have the ability to transport viable P. cinnamomi in their digestive tract.  相似文献   

3.
On the north regions of Portugal and Spain, the Castanea sativa Mill. culture is extremely important. The biggest productivity and yield break occurs due to the ink disease, the causal agent being the oomycete Phytophthora cinnamomi. This oomycete is also responsible for the decline of many other plant species in Europe and worldwide. P. cinnamomi and Phytophthora cambivora are considered, by the generality of the authors, as the C. sativa ink disease causal agents. Most Phytophthora species secrete large amounts of elicitins, a group of unique highly conserved proteins that are able to induce hypersensitive response (HR) and enhances plant defense responses in a systemic acquired resistance (SAR) manner against infection by different pathogens. Some other proteins involved in mechanisms of infection by P. cinnamomi were identified by our group: endo-1,3-beta-glucanase (complete cds); exo-glucanase (partial cds) responsible by adhesion, penetration, and colonization of host tissues; glucanase inhibitor protein (GIP) (complete cds) responsible by the suppression of host defense responses; necrosis-inducing Phytophthora protein 1 (NPP1) (partial cds); and transglutaminase (partial cds) which inducts defense responses and disease-like symptoms. In this mini-review, we present some scientifically advanced solutions that can contribute to the resolution of ink disease.  相似文献   

4.
Gibberellins (GAs) regulate petunia corolla pigmentation and elongation. To study this hormone's effect at the molecular level, we used the tomato gast1 gene as a probe to isolate a gibberellin-induced gene (gip) from petunia corollas. The deduced sequence of gip exhibited 82% identity with GAST1 protein and contained a short, highly hydrophobic N-terminal region. High levels of gip expression were detected in elongating corollas and young stem internodes. When detached corollas were grown in vitro in sucrose medium, gip expression was strongly induced by gibberellic acid (GA3). GA3-induced gip expression in corollas was inhibited by abscisic acid (ABA). The expression of the gene was also induced by GA3 in detached young stem segments. Sucrose was not essential for GA-induced gip expression in corollas but enhanced its effect. In stems, on the other hand, sucrose inhibited the effect of the hormone. The results of the present work support the possible role of gip in GA-induced corolla and stem elongation.  相似文献   

5.
Invasive species can increase the susceptibility of ecosystems to disease by acting as reservoir hosts for pathogens. Invasive hosts are often sparsely recorded and not in equilibrium, so predicting their spatial distributions and overlap with other hosts is problematic. We applied newly developed methods for modelling the distribution of invasive species to the invasive shrub Rhododendron ponticum—a foliar reservoir host for the Phytophthora oomycete plant pathogens, P. ramorum and P. kernoviae, that threaten woodland and heathland habitat in Scotland. We compiled eleven datasets of biological records for R. ponticum (1,691 points, 8,455 polygons) and developed Maximum Entropy (MaxEnt) models incorporating landscape, soil and climate predictors. Our models produced accurate predictions of current suitable R. ponticum habitat (training AUC = 0.838; test AUC = 0.838) that corresponded well with population performance (areal cover). Continuous broad-leaved woodland cover, low elevation (<400 m a.s.l.) and intermediate levels of soil moisture (or Enhanced Vegetation Index) favoured presence of R. ponticum. The high coincidence of suitable habitat with both core native woodlands (54 % of woodlands) and plantations of another sporulation host, Larix kaempferi (64 % of plantations) suggests a high potential for spread of Phytophthora infection to woodland mediated by R. ponticum. Incorporating non-equilibrium modelling methods did not improve habitat suitability predictions of this invasive host, possibly because, as a long-standing invader, R. ponticum has filled more of its available habitat at this national scale than previously suspected.  相似文献   

6.
Diseases caused by Phytophthora pathogens devastate many crops worldwide. During infection, Phytophthora pathogens secrete effectors, which are central molecules for understanding the complex plant–Phytophthora interactions. In this study, we profiled the effector repertoire secreted by Phytophthora sojae into the soybean (Glycine max) apoplast during infection using liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. A secreted aldose 1-epimerase (AEP1) was shown to induce cell death in Nicotiana benthamiana, as did the other two AEP1s from different Phytophthora species. AEP1 could also trigger immune responses in N. benthamiana, other Solanaceae plants, and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). A glucose dehydrogenase assay revealed AEP1 encodes an active AEP1. The enzyme activity of AEP1 is dispensable for AEP1-triggered cell death and immune responses, while AEP-triggered immune signaling in N. benthamiana requires the central immune regulator BRASSINOSTEROID INSENSITIVE 1-associated receptor kinase 1. In addition, AEP1 acts as a virulence factor that mediates P. sojae extracellular sugar uptake by mutarotation of extracellular aldose from the α-anomer to the β-anomer. Taken together, these results revealed the function of a microbial apoplastic effector, highlighting the importance of extracellular sugar uptake for Phytophthora infection. To counteract, the key effector for sugar conversion can be recognized by the plant membrane receptor complex to activate plant immunity.

Phytophthora sojae apoplastic effector AEP1 triggers pattern-triggered immunity in nonhost plants and contributes to P. sojae virulence by promoting the uptake of extracellular sugar.  相似文献   

7.
Three fungi, isolated from soil from which Phytophthora was not obtained, were evaluated for antagonism of Phytophthora spp. shown to cause root rot of chestnut in South Australia. Trichoderma hamatum and T. pseudokoningii appeared to inhibit P. cinnamomi by mycoparasitism. with evidence of parallel growth and coiling, and both Trichoderma spp. and Gliocladium virens grew over P. cinnamomi in vitro, preventing further growth of this pathogen. Antibiotics produced by young T. hamatum cultures and G. virens in culture filtrate experiments inhibited growth of P. cinnamomi and P. citricola. with filtrate from 4-day-old cultures of G. virens showing the greatest potential for biocontrol. All three antagonists prevented P. cinnamomi and P. citricola from causing infection symptoms on micropropagated shoots of chestnut cvs Goldsworthy and Buffalo Queen in an in vitro excised shoot bioassay for biocontrol.  相似文献   

8.
Biflagellate zoospores of the highly destructive plant pathogens in the genus Phytophthora are responsible for the initiation of infection of host plants. Zoospore motility is a critical component of the infection process because it allows zoospores to actively target suitable infection sites on potential hosts. Flagellar assembly and function in eukaryotes depends on a number of dynein-based molecular motors that facilitate retrograde intraflagellar transport and sliding of adjacent microtubule doublets in the flagellar axonemes. Dynein light chain 1 (DLC1) is one of a number of proteins in the dynein outer arm multiprotein complex. It is a 22 kDa leucine-rich repeat protein that binds to the catalytic motor domain of the dynein γ heavy chain. We report the cloning and characterization of DLC1 homologues in Phytophthora cinnamomi and Phytophthora nicotianae (PcDLC1 and PnDLC1). PcDLC1 and PnDLC1 are single copy genes that are more highly expressed in sporulating hyphae than in vegetative hyphae, zoospores or germinated cysts. Polyclonal antibodies raised against PnDLC1 locallized PnDLC1 along the length of the flagella of P. nicotianae zoospores. RNAi-mediated silencing of PnDLC1 expression yielded transformants that released non-flagellate, non-motile zoospores from their sporangia. Our observations indicate that zoospore motility is not required for zoospore release from P. nicotianae sporangia or for breakage of the evanescent vesicle into which zoospores are initially discharged.  相似文献   

9.
10.
A polyclonal antiserum (A379) against water soluble proteins from Phytophthora cinnamomi mycelium was produced in rabbit. In ELISA, the 1 : 10 000 diluted antiserum revealed only Phytophthora isolates, not allowing a clear‐cut discrimination among congenerous species, in spite of a generally higher reactivity on P. cinnamomi proteins. The antiserum gave positive reactions in Western blot analyses against mycelial proteins from nine species of Phytophthora and Pythium sp. (grown on rich media), but not with Rhizoctonia solani, binucleate Rhizoctonia, Verticillium dahliae, Fusarium oxysporum and Cryphonectria parasitica. All Phytophthora species showed common epitopes on proteins of molecular masses 77, 66, 51 and 48 kDa. However, a species‐specific protein of 55 kDa was immunodecorated only in P. cinnamomi samples, thus allowing univocal identification of this species. When tested against total proteins from the same fungi grown on water, the antibody revealed diagnostic bands of 55 and 51 kDa in P. cinnamomi only. The antiserum is therefore suitable for the specific identification of P. cinnamomi emerging in distilled water from infected tissues of chestnut, blueberry and azalea.  相似文献   

11.
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13.
A new heat treatment for recycled irrigation water using 48 °C for 24 h to inactivate Phytophthora and bacterial plant pathogens is estimated to reduce fuel cost and environmental footprint by more than 50 % compared to current protocol (95 °C for 30 s). The objective of this study was to determine the impact of this new heat treatment temperature regime on bacterial community structure in water and its practical implications. Bacterial communities in irrigation water were analyzed before and after heat treatment using both culture-dependent and -independent strategies based on the 16S ribosomal DNA. A significant shift was observed in the bacterial community after heat treatment. Most importantly, bacteria with biological control potential—Bacillus and Paenibacillus, and Pseudomonas species became more abundant at both 48 and 42 °C. These findings imply that the new heat treatment procedure not only controls existing plant pathogens but also may make the heat-treated irrigation water a more antagonistic environment against plant pathogens, promoting sustainable disease management.  相似文献   

14.
Phytophthora species secrete a large array of effectors during infection of their host plants. The Crinkler (CRN) gene family encodes a ubiquitous but understudied class of effectors with possible but as of yet unknown roles in infection. To appreciate CRN effector function in Phytophthora, we devised a simple Crn gene identification and annotation pipeline to improve effector prediction rates. We predicted 84 full-length CRN coding genes and assessed CRN effector domain diversity in sequenced Oomycete genomes. These analyses revealed evidence of CRN domain innovation in Phytophthora and expansion in the Peronosporales. We performed gene expression analyses to validate and define two classes of CRN effectors, each possibly contributing to infection at different stages. CRN localisation studies revealed that P. capsici CRN effector domains target the nucleus and accumulate in specific sub-nuclear compartments. Phenotypic analyses showed that few CRN domains induce necrosis when expressed in planta and that one cell death inducing effector, enhances P. capsici virulence on Nicotiana benthamiana. These results suggest that the CRN protein family form an important class of intracellular effectors that target the host nucleus during infection. These results combined with domain expansion in hemi-biotrophic and necrotrophic pathogens, suggests specific contributions to pathogen lifestyles. This work will bolster CRN identification efforts in other sequenced oomycete species and set the stage for future functional studies towards understanding CRN effector functions.  相似文献   

15.
ABOUT half the species of Phytophthora, including many important plant pathogens such as P. palmivora, P. cinnamomi and P. infestans, are heterothallic. Consistent induction of sexual reproduction in agar cultures of heterothallic species requires the pairing of isolates of the two compatibility groups, A1 and A2 (refs. 1–3). Although sex organs are occasionally formed in cultures of single isolates, such isolates though intrinsically bisexual are normally self-sterile2–3. In consequence it has been assumed that in nature the presence of both compatibility types is required for the formation of oospores.  相似文献   

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17.
The role of defence gene expression triggered by Cd toxicity in the plant’s response to Botrytis cinerea was investigated in Arabidopsis thaliana Columbia 0. Silicon (0 or 1.5 mM) and Cd (0, 1 or 10 μM) were supplied to 3-month-old solution-cultured plants. After 3 days, half of the plants of each treatment were inoculated with Botrytis. Supplied Cd concentrations were below the toxicity threshold and did not cause shoot growth inhibition or evidence of oxidative stress, while Botrytis infection severely decreased plant growth in all treatments. The expression of marker genes PR1 and BGL2 for the salicylic acid (SA) and the PDF1.2 for the jasmonic acid–ethylene (JA–ET) signalling pathways was enhanced in 10 μM Cd-treated non-infected plants. Twenty hours after inoculation, PDF1.2 expression showed a strong increase in all treatments, while enhanced PR1, BGL2, and CHIB expression was only found 7 days after infection. A great synergistic effect of Cd and Botrytis on PDF1.2 expression was found in 10 μM Cd-treated plants. Silicon decreased PR1, BGL2, and CHIB, while increasing PDF1.2 expression, which indicates its role as a modulator of the signalling pathways involved in the plant’s response to fungal infection. Botrytis growth decreased in 10 μM Cd-treated plants, which could be due to the combined effects of Cd and Botrytis activating the SA and JA–ET-mediated signalling pathways. Taken together, our results provide support for the view that Cd concentrations close to the toxicity threshold induce defence signalling pathways which potentiate the plant’s response against fungal infection.  相似文献   

18.
Phytophthora cinnamomi is a soil-borne plant pathogen that has caused widespread damage to vulnerable native ecosystems and agriculture systems across the world and shows no sign of abating. Management of the pathogen in the natural environment is difficult and the options are limited. In order to discover more about how resistant plants are able to defend themselves against this generalist pathogen, a microarray study of plant gene expression following root inoculation with P. cinnamomi was undertaken. Zea mays was used as a resistant model plant, and microarray analysis was conducted using the Affymetrix GeneChip Maize Genome Array on root samples collected at 6- and 24-h post-inoculation. Over 300 genes were differentially expressed in inoculated roots compared with controls across the two time points. Following Gene Ontology enrichment analysis and REVIGO visualisation of the up-regulated genes, many were implicated in plant defence responses to biotic stress. Genes that were up-regulated included those involved in phytoalexin biosynthesis and jasmonic acid/ethylene biosynthesis and other defence-related genes including those encoding glutathione S-transferases and serine-protease inhibitors. Of particular interest was the identification of the two most highly up-regulated genes, terpene synthase11 (Tps11) and kaurene synthase2 (An2), which are both involved in production of terpenoid phytoalexins. This is the first study that has investigated gene expression at a global level in roots in response to P. cinnamomi in a model plant species and provides valuable insights into the mechanisms involved in defence.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Yin  Bei  Scupham  Alexandra J  Menge  John A.  Borneman  James 《Plant and Soil》2004,259(1-2):19-27
Understanding the mechanisms of suppressive soils should lead to the development of new strategies to manage pests and diseases. For suppressive soils that have a biological nature, one of the first steps in understanding them is to identify the organisms contributing to this phenomenon. Here we present a new approach for identifying microorganisms involved in soil suppressiveness. This strategy identifies microorganisms that fill a niche similar to that of the pathogen by utilizing substrate utilization assays in soil. To demonstrate this approach, we examined an avocado grove where a Phytophthora cinnamomi epidemic created soils in which the pathogen could not be detected with baiting techniques, a characteristic common to many soils with suppressiveness against P. cinnamomi. Substrate utilization assays were used to identify rRNA genes (rDNA) from bacteria that rapidly grew in response to amino acids known to attract P. cinnamomi zoospores. Six bacterial rDNA intergenic sequences were prevalent in the epidemic soils but uncommon in the non-epidemic soils. These sequences belonged to bacteria related to Bacillus mycoides, Renibacterium salmoninarum, and Streptococcus pneumoniae. We hypothesize that bacteria such as these, which respond to the same environmental cues that trigger root infection by the pathogen, will occupy a niche similar to that of the pathogen and contribute to suppressiveness through mechanisms such as nutrient competition and antibiosis.  相似文献   

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