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An actin mechanostat ensures hyphal tip sharpness inPhytophthora infestansto achieve host penetration

Authors :
Jochem Bronkhorst
Kiki Kots
Djanick de Jong
Michiel Kasteel
Thomas van Boxmeer
Tanweer Joemmanbaks
Francine Govers
Jasper van der Gucht
Tijs Ketelaar
Joris Sprakel
Source :
Science Advances 8 (2022) 23, Science Advances, 8(23), eabo0875-eabo0875
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2022.

Abstract

Filamentous plant pathogens apply mechanical forces to pierce their hosts surface and penetrate its tissues. DevastatingPhytophthorapathogens harness a specialized form of invasive tip growth to slice through the plant surface, wielding their hypha as a microscopic knife. Slicing requires a sharp hyphal tip that is not blunted at the site of the mechanical interaction. How tip shape is controlled, however, is unknown. We uncover an actin-based mechanostat inPhytophthora infestansthat controls tip sharpness during penetration. Mechanical stimulation of the hypha leads to the emergence of an aster-like actin configuration, which shows fast, local, and quantitative feedback to the local stress. We evidence that this functions as an adaptive mechanical scaffold that sharpens the invasive weapon and prevents it from blunting. The hyphal tip mechanostat enables the efficient conversion of turgor into localized invasive pressures that are required to achieve host penetration.

Details

ISSN :
23752548
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....902943bc42e571eba3f5dd2ec558843d