Time-Course RNAseq Reveals Exserohilum turcicum Effectors and Pathogenicity Determinants

Exserohilum turcicum (sexual stage Setosphaeria turcica) is the hemibiotrophic causal agent of northern leaf blight of maize and sorghum. This study aimed to identify the genes involved in host colonization during the biotrophic and necrotrophic phases of infection. It also aimed to identify race-sp...

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Main Authors: Maria Petronella Human, Dave Kenneth Berger, Bridget Genevieve Crampton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2020.00360/full
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spelling doaj-01870091f6f748a180b39de1f6ac19642020-11-25T02:57:38ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2020-03-011110.3389/fmicb.2020.00360495535Time-Course RNAseq Reveals Exserohilum turcicum Effectors and Pathogenicity DeterminantsMaria Petronella HumanDave Kenneth BergerBridget Genevieve CramptonExserohilum turcicum (sexual stage Setosphaeria turcica) is the hemibiotrophic causal agent of northern leaf blight of maize and sorghum. This study aimed to identify the genes involved in host colonization during the biotrophic and necrotrophic phases of infection. It also aimed to identify race-specific differences in gene expression. RNAseq of maize seedlings inoculated with a race 13N or 23N E. turcicum isolate was conducted before inoculation and at 2, 5, 7, and 13 days post-inoculation (dpi). Biological replicates were pooled per time point for each race and sequenced. A bioinformatics pipeline was used to identify candidate effectors, and expression was validated for selected candidates. Fungal biomass was positively correlated with the percentages of E. turcicum reads mapped, which were low at early time points (2–7 dpi) with a significant increase at 13 dpi, indicating a lifestyle switch from biotrophy to necrotrophy between 7 and 13 dpi. AVRHt1 is the putative E. turcicum effector recognized by the maize resistance gene Ht1. Consistent with this, AVRHt1 was expressed in planta by race 23N, but transcripts were absent in race 13N. In addition, specific transposable elements were expressed in 23N only. Genes encoding the virulence-associated peptidases leupeptin-inhibiting protein 1 and fungalysin were expressed in planta. Transcriptional profiles of genes involved in secondary metabolite synthesis or cell wall degradation revealed the importance of these genes during late stages of infection (13 dpi). A total of 346 expressed candidate effectors were identified, including Ecp6 and proteins similar to the secreted in xylem (SIX) effectors common to formae speciales of Fusarium oxysporum, SIX13 and SIX5. Expression profiling of Ecp6 and SIX13-like indicated a peak in expression at 5 and 7 dpi compared to 2 and 13 dpi. Sequencing of SIX13-like from diverse isolates of E. turcicum revealed host-specific polymorphisms that were mostly non-synonymous, resulting in two groups of SIX13-like proteins that corresponded to the maize or sorghum origin of each isolate. This study suggests putative mechanisms whereby E. turcicum causes disease. Identification of the candidate effector SIX13-like is consistent with the infection mode of E. turcicum through the xylem of susceptible hosts.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2020.00360/fullSIX13-likeAVRHt1Ecp6transcriptional profilingeffector sequencing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Petronella Human
Dave Kenneth Berger
Bridget Genevieve Crampton
spellingShingle Maria Petronella Human
Dave Kenneth Berger
Bridget Genevieve Crampton
Time-Course RNAseq Reveals Exserohilum turcicum Effectors and Pathogenicity Determinants
Frontiers in Microbiology
SIX13-like
AVRHt1
Ecp6
transcriptional profiling
effector sequencing
author_facet Maria Petronella Human
Dave Kenneth Berger
Bridget Genevieve Crampton
author_sort Maria Petronella Human
title Time-Course RNAseq Reveals Exserohilum turcicum Effectors and Pathogenicity Determinants
title_short Time-Course RNAseq Reveals Exserohilum turcicum Effectors and Pathogenicity Determinants
title_full Time-Course RNAseq Reveals Exserohilum turcicum Effectors and Pathogenicity Determinants
title_fullStr Time-Course RNAseq Reveals Exserohilum turcicum Effectors and Pathogenicity Determinants
title_full_unstemmed Time-Course RNAseq Reveals Exserohilum turcicum Effectors and Pathogenicity Determinants
title_sort time-course rnaseq reveals exserohilum turcicum effectors and pathogenicity determinants
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Microbiology
issn 1664-302X
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Exserohilum turcicum (sexual stage Setosphaeria turcica) is the hemibiotrophic causal agent of northern leaf blight of maize and sorghum. This study aimed to identify the genes involved in host colonization during the biotrophic and necrotrophic phases of infection. It also aimed to identify race-specific differences in gene expression. RNAseq of maize seedlings inoculated with a race 13N or 23N E. turcicum isolate was conducted before inoculation and at 2, 5, 7, and 13 days post-inoculation (dpi). Biological replicates were pooled per time point for each race and sequenced. A bioinformatics pipeline was used to identify candidate effectors, and expression was validated for selected candidates. Fungal biomass was positively correlated with the percentages of E. turcicum reads mapped, which were low at early time points (2–7 dpi) with a significant increase at 13 dpi, indicating a lifestyle switch from biotrophy to necrotrophy between 7 and 13 dpi. AVRHt1 is the putative E. turcicum effector recognized by the maize resistance gene Ht1. Consistent with this, AVRHt1 was expressed in planta by race 23N, but transcripts were absent in race 13N. In addition, specific transposable elements were expressed in 23N only. Genes encoding the virulence-associated peptidases leupeptin-inhibiting protein 1 and fungalysin were expressed in planta. Transcriptional profiles of genes involved in secondary metabolite synthesis or cell wall degradation revealed the importance of these genes during late stages of infection (13 dpi). A total of 346 expressed candidate effectors were identified, including Ecp6 and proteins similar to the secreted in xylem (SIX) effectors common to formae speciales of Fusarium oxysporum, SIX13 and SIX5. Expression profiling of Ecp6 and SIX13-like indicated a peak in expression at 5 and 7 dpi compared to 2 and 13 dpi. Sequencing of SIX13-like from diverse isolates of E. turcicum revealed host-specific polymorphisms that were mostly non-synonymous, resulting in two groups of SIX13-like proteins that corresponded to the maize or sorghum origin of each isolate. This study suggests putative mechanisms whereby E. turcicum causes disease. Identification of the candidate effector SIX13-like is consistent with the infection mode of E. turcicum through the xylem of susceptible hosts.
topic SIX13-like
AVRHt1
Ecp6
transcriptional profiling
effector sequencing
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2020.00360/full
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