Author:
Ökmen Bilal,Jaeger Elaine,Schilling Lena,Finke Natalie,Lee Yoon Joo,Wemhöner Raphael,Pauly Markus,Neumann Ulla,Doehlemann Gunther
Abstract
SummaryThe smut fungi are one of the largest groups of fungal plant pathogens, causing disease in all cereal crops. They directly penetrate their hosts and establish a biotrophic interaction. During colonization of the plant, smut fungi secrete a wide range of effector proteins, which suppress plant immunity and modulate cellular functions as well as development of the host, thereby determining the pathogen’s life-style and virulence potential.The conserved effector Erc1 (enzyme required for cell-to-cell movement) contributes to virulence of the corn smut Ustilago maydis in maize leaves, but not on the tassel. Erc1 binds to host cell wall components and has a 1,3-β-glucanase activity, which is required to attenuate β-glucan-induced defense responses in host leaves. Confocal microscopy revealed that Erc1 has a cell type-specific virulence function, being necessary for fungal cell-to-cell movement in the plant bundle sheath. This cell type-specific virulence function of Erc1 is fully conserved in the barley pathogen Ustilago hordei, which has a functionally conserved Erc1 orthologue.Thus, Erc1 is an enzymatically active core virulence factor with a cell type-specific virulence function in different hosts, which is important for cell-to-cell movement during host colonization of pathogenic smut fungi.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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