Ethylene Promotes Expression of the Appressorium-and Pathogenicity-Related Genes via GPCR-and MAPK-Dependent Manners in Colletotrichum gloeosporioides

Dandan Ren, Tan Wang, Ganghan Zhou, Weiheng Ren, Xiaomin Duan, Lin Gao, Jiaxu Chen, Ling Xu*, Pinkuan Zhu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ethylene (ET) represents a signal that can be sensed by plant pathogenic fungi to accelerate their spore germination and subsequent infection. However, the molecular mechanisms of responses to ET in fungi remain largely unclear. In this study, Colletotrichum gloeosporioides was investigated via transcriptomic analysis to reveal the genes that account for the ET-regulated fungal development and virulence. The results showed that ET promoted genes encoding for fungal melanin biosynthesis enzymes, extracellular hydrolases, and appressorium-associated structure proteins at 4 h after treat-ment. When the germination lasted until 24 h, ET induced multiple appressoria from every single spore, but downregulated most of the genes. Loss of selected ET responsive genes encoding for scy-talone dehydratase (CgSCD1) and cerato-platanin virulence protein (CgCP1) were unable to alter ET sensitivity of C. gloeosporioides in vitro but attenuated the influence of ET on pathogenicity. Knockout of the G-protein-coupled receptors CgGPCR3-1/2 and the MAPK signaling pathway components CgMK1 and CgSte11 resulted in reduced ET sensitivity. Taken together, this study in C. gloeosporioides reports that ET can cause transcription changes in a large set of genes, which are mainly responsible for appressorium development and virulence expression, and these processes are dependent on the GPCR and MAPK pathways.

Original languageEnglish
Article number570
JournalJournal of Fungi
Volume8
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2022

Keywords

  • GPCRs
  • MAPK
  • anthracnose
  • appressorium
  • ethylene
  • postharvest disease

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