Artículo
Plant triterpenoid saponins function as susceptibility factors to promote the pathogenicity of Botrytis cinerea
Escaray, Francisco José
; Felipo Benavent, Amelia; Antonelli, Cristian Javier
; Balaguer, Begoña; Lopez Gresa, Maria Pilar; Vera, Pablo


Fecha de publicación:
07/2024
Editorial:
Oxford University Press
Revista:
Molecular Plant
ISSN:
1674-2052
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
The gray mold fungus Botrytis cinerea is a necrotrophic pathogen that causes diseases in hundreds of plant species, including high-value crops. Its polyxenous nature and pathogenic success are due to its ability to perceive host signals in its favor. In this study, we found that laticifer cells of Euphorbia lathyris are a source of susceptibility factors required by B. cinerea to cause disease. Consequently, poor-in-latex (pil) mutants, which lack laticifer cells, show full resistance to this pathogen, whereas lot-of-latex mutants, which produce more laticifer cells, are hypersusceptible. These S factors are triterpenoid saponins, which are widely distributed natural products of vast structural diversity. The downregulation of laticifer-specific oxydosqualene cyclase genes, which encode the first committed step enzymes for triterpene and, therefore, saponin biosynthesis, conferred disease resistance to B. cinerea. Likewise, the Medicago truncatula lha-1 mutant, compromised in triterpenoid saponin biosynthesis, showed enhanced resistance. Interestingly, the application of different purified triterpenoid saponins pharmacologically complemented the disease-resistant phenotype of pil and hla-1 mutants and enhanced disease susceptibility in different plant species. We found that triterpenoid saponins function as plant cues that signal transcriptional reprogramming in B. cinerea, leading to a change in its growth habit and infection strategy, culminating in the abundant formation of infection cushions, the multicellular appressoria apparatus dedicated to plant penetration and biomass destruction in B. cinerea. Taken together, these results provide an explanation for how plant triterpenoid saponins function as disease susceptibility factors to promote B. cinerea pathogenicity.
Archivos asociados
Licencia
Identificadores
Colecciones
Articulos(INFIVE)
Articulos de INST.DE FISIOLOGIA VEGETAL
Articulos de INST.DE FISIOLOGIA VEGETAL
Citación
Escaray, Francisco José; Felipo Benavent, Amelia; Antonelli, Cristian Javier; Balaguer, Begoña; Lopez Gresa, Maria Pilar; et al.; Plant triterpenoid saponins function as susceptibility factors to promote the pathogenicity of Botrytis cinerea; Oxford University Press; Molecular Plant; 17; 7; 7-2024; 1073-1089
Compartir
Altmétricas