Fernandez Jessie, Wilson Richard A
Department of Plant Pathology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE, 68583, USA.
Protoplasma. 2014 Jan;251(1):37-47. doi: 10.1007/s00709-013-0541-8. Epub 2013 Aug 29.
The rice blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae is a global food security threat due to its destruction of cultivated rice. Of the world's rice harvest, 10-30 % is lost each year to this pathogen, and changing climates are likely to favor its spread into new areas. Insights into how the fungus might be contained could come from the wealth of molecular and cellular studies that have been undertaken in order to shed light on the biological underpinnings of blast disease, aspects of which we review herein. Infection begins when a three-celled spore lands on the surface of a leaf, germinates, and develops the specialized infection structure called the appressorium. The mature appressorium develops a high internal turgor that acts on a thin penetration peg, forcing it through the rice cuticle and into the underlying epidermal cells. Primary then invasive hyphae (IH) elaborate from the peg and grow asymptomatically from one living rice cell to another for the first few days of infection before host cells begin to die and characteristic necrotic lesions form on the surface of the leaf, from which spores are produced to continue the life cycle. To gain new insights into the biology of rice blast disease, we argue that, conceptually, the infection process can be viewed as two discrete phases occurring in markedly different environments and requiring distinct biochemical pathways and morphogenetic regulation: outside the host cell, where the appressorium develops in a nutrient-free environment, and inside the host cell, where filamentous growth occurs in a glucose-rich, nitrogen-poor environment, at least from the perspective of the fungus. Here, we review the physiological and metabolic changes that occur in M. oryzae as it transitions from the surface to the interior of the host, thus enabling us to draw lessons about the strategies that allow M. oryzae cells to thrive in rice cells.
稻瘟病菌Magnaporthe oryzae对全球粮食安全构成威胁,因为它会破坏栽培水稻。在世界水稻收成中,每年有10%至30%因这种病原体而损失,而且气候变化可能会促使其传播到新的地区。为了阐明稻瘟病的生物学基础,已经开展了大量分子和细胞研究,对如何控制这种真菌的深入了解可能来自这些研究,本文将对其中一些方面进行综述。当一个三细胞孢子落在叶片表面、萌发并形成称为附着胞的特殊感染结构时,感染就开始了。成熟的附着胞会产生高内部膨压,作用于一个细的侵入栓,迫使它穿透水稻角质层并进入下面的表皮细胞。最初,侵入菌丝(IH)从侵入栓延伸出来,在感染的最初几天里从一个活的水稻细胞无症状地生长到另一个细胞,直到宿主细胞开始死亡,叶片表面形成典型的坏死病斑,从中产生孢子以延续生命周期。为了获得对稻瘟病生物学的新见解,我们认为,从概念上讲,感染过程可以看作是在明显不同的环境中发生的两个离散阶段,需要不同的生化途径和形态发生调控:在宿主细胞外,附着胞在无营养环境中发育;在宿主细胞内,至少从真菌的角度来看,丝状生长发生在富含葡萄糖、氮含量低的环境中。在这里,我们综述了稻瘟病菌从宿主表面过渡到内部时发生的生理和代谢变化,从而使我们能够吸取有关使稻瘟病菌细胞在水稻细胞中茁壮成长的策略的经验教训。