Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
Complex Carbohydrate Research Center, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA.
Plant Physiol. 2023 Jan 2;191(1):575-590. doi: 10.1093/plphys/kiac408.
Postharvest fungal pathogens benefit from the increased host susceptibility that occurs during fruit ripening. In unripe fruit, pathogens often remain quiescent and unable to cause disease until ripening begins, emerging at this point into destructive necrotrophic lifestyles that quickly result in fruit decay. Here, we demonstrate that one such pathogen, Botrytis cinerea, actively induces ripening processes to facilitate infections and promote disease in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). Assessments of ripening progression revealed that B. cinerea accelerated external coloration, ethylene production, and softening in unripe fruit, while mRNA sequencing of inoculated unripe fruit confirmed the corresponding upregulation of host genes involved in ripening processes, such as ethylene biosynthesis and cell wall degradation. Furthermore, an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)-based glycomics technique used to assess fruit cell wall polysaccharides revealed remarkable similarities in the cell wall polysaccharide changes caused by both infections of unripe fruit and ripening of healthy fruit, particularly in the increased accessibility of pectic polysaccharides. Virulence and additional ripening assessment experiments with B. cinerea knockout mutants showed that induction of ripening depends on the ability to infect the host and break down pectin. The B. cinerea double knockout Δbc polygalacturonase1 Δbc polygalacturonase2 lacking two critical pectin degrading enzymes was incapable of emerging from quiescence even long after the fruit had ripened at its own pace, suggesting that the failure to accelerate ripening severely inhibits fungal survival on unripe fruit. These findings demonstrate that active induction of ripening in unripe tomato fruit is an important infection strategy for B. cinerea.
采后真菌病原体受益于果实成熟过程中宿主易感性的增加。在未成熟的果实中,病原体通常处于休眠状态,无法致病,直到成熟开始,此时它们会进入破坏性的坏死营养生活方式,迅速导致果实腐烂。在这里,我们证明了一种病原体,灰葡萄孢(Botrytis cinerea),积极诱导成熟过程,以促进感染并促进番茄(Solanum lycopersicum)的疾病发展。对成熟进程的评估表明,灰葡萄孢加速了未成熟果实的外部着色、乙烯生成和软化,而接种未成熟果实的 mRNA 测序证实了参与成熟过程的宿主基因的相应上调,如乙烯生物合成和细胞壁降解。此外,用于评估果实细胞壁多糖的基于酶联免疫吸附测定(ELISA)的糖组学技术揭示了未成熟果实感染和健康果实成熟引起的细胞壁多糖变化之间的显著相似性,特别是在果胶多糖的可及性增加方面。灰葡萄孢缺失突变体的毒力和额外的成熟评估实验表明,成熟的诱导依赖于感染宿主和分解果胶的能力。缺乏两种关键果胶降解酶的灰葡萄孢双缺失突变体 Δbc 多聚半乳糖醛酸酶 1 Δbc 多聚半乳糖醛酸酶 2 即使在果实自行成熟很久后也无法从休眠中苏醒,这表明无法加速成熟严重抑制了真菌在未成熟果实上的存活。这些发现表明,在未成熟的番茄果实中主动诱导成熟是灰葡萄孢的一种重要感染策略。