Department of Biomolecular Chemistry, Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology (HKI) , Jena, Germany.
Department of Pharmaceutical Microbiology, Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, Friedrich Schiller University Jena , Jena, Germany.
mBio. 2023 Aug 31;14(4):e0078723. doi: 10.1128/mbio.00787-23. Epub 2023 Jul 24.
The soft rot pathogen causes devastating damage to button mushrooms (), one of the most cultivated and commercially relevant mushrooms. We previously discovered that this pathogen releases the membrane-disrupting lipopeptide jagaricin. This bacterial toxin, however, could not solely explain the rapid decay of mushroom fruiting bodies, indicating that implements a more sophisticated infection strategy. In this study, we show that secretion systems play a crucial role in soft rot disease. By mining the genome of , we identified gene clusters encoding a type I (T1SS), a type II (T2SS), a type III (T3SS), and two type VI secretion systems (T6SSs). We targeted the T2SS and T3SS for gene inactivation studies, and subsequent bioassays implicated both in soft rot disease. Furthermore, through a combination of comparative secretome analysis and activity-guided fractionation, we identified a number of secreted lytic enzymes responsible for mushroom damage. Our findings regarding the contribution of secretion systems to the disease process expand the current knowledge of bacterial soft rot pathogens and represent a significant stride toward identifying targets for their disarmament with secretion system inhibitors. IMPORTANCE The button mushroom () is the most popular edible mushroom in the Western world. However, mushroom crops can fall victim to serious bacterial diseases that are a major threat to the mushroom industry, among them being soft rot disease caused by . Here, we show that the rapid dissolution of mushroom fruiting bodies after bacterial invasion is due to degradative enzymes and putative effector proteins secreted via the type II secretion system (T2SS) and the type III secretion system (T3SS), respectively. The ability to degrade mushroom tissue is significantly attenuated in secretion-deficient mutants, which establishes that secretion systems are key factors in mushroom soft rot disease. This insight is of both ecological and agricultural relevance by shedding light on the disease processes behind a pathogenic bacterial-fungal interaction which, in turn, serves as a starting point for the development of secretion system inhibitors to control disease progression.
软腐病菌会对纽扣蘑菇()造成毁灭性的破坏,纽扣蘑菇是栽培和商业上最重要的蘑菇之一。我们之前发现,这种病原体释放出破坏膜的脂肽 Jagaricin。然而,这种细菌毒素不能单独解释蘑菇子实体的快速腐烂,这表明 实施了更复杂的感染策略。在这项研究中,我们表明分泌系统在软腐病中起着关键作用。通过挖掘 的基因组,我们鉴定了编码 I 型(T1SS)、II 型(T2SS)、III 型(T3SS)和两个 VI 型分泌系统(T6SS)的基因簇。我们针对 T2SS 和 T3SS 进行了基因失活研究,随后的生物测定表明这两种系统都与软腐病有关。此外,通过比较分泌组分析和基于活性的分级分离相结合,我们鉴定了一些负责蘑菇损伤的分泌裂解酶。我们关于分泌系统对疾病过程的贡献的发现扩展了对细菌软腐病病原体的现有认识,并代表了朝着用分泌系统抑制剂为它们的裁军确定目标迈出的重要一步。
纽扣蘑菇()是西方世界最受欢迎的食用蘑菇。然而,蘑菇作物可能会受到严重细菌病的侵害,这些病对蘑菇产业构成了重大威胁,其中包括由 引起的软腐病。在这里,我们表明,细菌入侵后蘑菇子实体的迅速溶解是由于降解酶和推定的效应蛋白分别通过 II 型分泌系统(T2SS)和 III 型分泌系统(T3SS)分泌所致。在分泌缺陷突变体中,降解蘑菇组织的能力显著减弱,这表明分泌系统是蘑菇软腐病的关键因素。这一认识对于生态和农业都具有重要意义,它揭示了一种致病细菌-真菌相互作用背后的疾病过程,这反过来又为开发分泌系统抑制剂来控制疾病进展提供了起点。