Abstract
SummaryPlants interact with a plethora of pathogenic microorganisms in nature. Pathogen-plant interaction experiments focus mainly on single-strain infections, typically ignoring the complexity of multi-strain infections even though mixed infections are common and critical for the infection outcome. The wheat pathogenZymoseptoria triticiforms highly diverse fungal populations in which several pathogen strains often colonize the same leaf. Despite the importance of mixed infections, the mechanisms governing interactions between a mixture of pathogen strains within a plant host remain largely unexplored. Here we demonstrate that avirulent pathogen strains benefit from being in mixed infections with virulent strains. We show that virulent strains suppress the wheat immune response, allowing the avirulent strain to colonize the apoplast and to reproduce. Our experiments indicate that virulent strains in mixed infections can challenge the plant immune system both locally and systemically, providing a mechanistic explanation for the persistence of avirulent pathogen strains in fields planted to resistant host plants.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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