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A nonnative and a native fungal plant pathogen similarly stimulate ectomycorrhizal development but are perceived differently by a fungal symbiont

Authors :
Alfredo Vizzini
Paolo Gonthier
Elisa Zampieri
Guglielmo Gianni Lione
Luana Giordano
Fabiano Sillo
Raffaella Balestrini
Source :
New phytologist (Online) 213 (2017): 1836–1849. doi:10.1111/nph.14314, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Zampieri E., Giordano L., Lione G., Vizzini A., Sillo F., Balestrini R., Gonthier P./titolo:A nonnative and a native fungal plant pathogen similarly stimulate ectomycorrhizal development but are perceived differently by a fungal symbiont./doi:10.1111%2Fnph.14314/rivista:New phytologist (Online)/anno:2017/pagina_da:1836/pagina_a:1849/intervallo_pagine:1836–1849/volume:213
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The effects of plant symbionts on host defence responses against pathogens have been extensively documented, but little is known about the impact of pathogens on the symbiosis and if such an impact may differ for nonnative and native pathogens. Here, this issue was addressed in a study of the model system comprising Pinus pinea, its ectomycorrhizal symbiont Tuber borchii, and the nonnative and native pathogens Heterobasidion irregulare and Heterobasidion annosum, respectively. In a 6-month inoculation experiment and using both in planta and gene expression analyses, we tested the hypothesis that H. irregulare has greater effects on the symbiosis than H. annosum. Although the two pathogens induced the same morphological reaction in the plant-symbiont complex, with mycorrhizal density increasing exponentially with pathogen colonization of the host, the number of target genes regulated in T. borchii in plants inoculated with the native pathogen (i.e. 67% of tested genes) was more than twice that in plants inoculated with the nonnative pathogen (i.e. 27% of genes). Although the two fungal pathogens did not differentially affect the amount of ectomycorrhizas, the fungal symbiont perceived their presence differently. The results may suggest that the symbiont has the ability to recognize a self/native and a nonself/nonnative pathogen, probably through host plant-mediated signal transduction.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
New phytologist (Online) 213 (2017): 1836–1849. doi:10.1111/nph.14314, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Zampieri E., Giordano L., Lione G., Vizzini A., Sillo F., Balestrini R., Gonthier P./titolo:A nonnative and a native fungal plant pathogen similarly stimulate ectomycorrhizal development but are perceived differently by a fungal symbiont./doi:10.1111%2Fnph.14314/rivista:New phytologist (Online)/anno:2017/pagina_da:1836/pagina_a:1849/intervallo_pagine:1836–1849/volume:213
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c81389a72eea412f6527cafe5953251
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.14314