Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Pathology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853-5908
Abstract
Chickpea (
Cicer arietium
L.) produces the antimicrobial compounds (phytoalexins) medicarpin and maackiain in response to infection by microorganisms.
Nectria haematococca
mating population (MP) VI, a fungus pathogenic on chickpea, can metabolize maackiain and medicarpin to less toxic products. These reactions are thought to be detoxification mechanisms in
N. haematococca
MP VI and required for pathogenesis by this fungus on chickpea. In the present study, these hypotheses were tested by examining the phenotypes of progeny from crosses of the fungus that segregated for genes (
Mak
genes) controlling phytoalexin metabolism.
Mak1
and
Mak2
, two genes that individually confer the ability to convert maackiain to its 1a-hydroxydienone derivative, were linked to higher tolerance of the phytoalexins and high virulence on chickpea. These results indicate that this metabolic reaction is a mechanism for increased phytoalexin tolerance in the fungus, which thereby allows a higher virulence on chickpea.
Mak3
, a gene conferring the ability to convert maackiain to its 6a-hydroxypterocarpan derivative, also increased tolerance to maackiain in strains which carried it; however, the contribution of
Mak3
to the overall level of pathogenesis could not be evaluated because most progeny from the cross segregating for this gene were low in virulence. Thus, metabolic detoxification of phytoalexins appeared to be necessary, as demonstrated in the
Mak1
and
Mak2
crosses, but not sufficient by itself, as in the
Mak3
cross, for high virulence of
N. haematococca
MP VI on chickpea.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
30 articles.
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