Aldaulactone – An Original Phytotoxic Secondary Metabolite Involved in the Aggressiveness of Alternaria dauci on Carrot

Qualitative plant resistance mechanisms and pathogen virulence have been extensively studied since the formulation of the gene-for-gene hypothesis. The mechanisms involved in the quantitative traits of aggressiveness and plant partial resistance are less well-known. Nevertheless, they are prevalent...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Julia Courtial, Latifa Hamama, Jean-Jacques Helesbeux, Mickaël Lecomte, Yann Renaux, Esteban Guichard, Linda Voisine, Claire Yovanopoulos, Bruno Hamon, Laurent Ogé, Pascal Richomme, Mathilde Briard, Tristan Boureau, Séverine Gagné, Pascal Poupard, Romain Berruyer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2018.00502/full
id doaj-a989e3dc681543daa5384270e2a1f9e0
record_format Article
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julia Courtial
Latifa Hamama
Jean-Jacques Helesbeux
Mickaël Lecomte
Yann Renaux
Esteban Guichard
Linda Voisine
Claire Yovanopoulos
Bruno Hamon
Laurent Ogé
Pascal Richomme
Mathilde Briard
Tristan Boureau
Séverine Gagné
Pascal Poupard
Romain Berruyer
Romain Berruyer
spellingShingle Julia Courtial
Latifa Hamama
Jean-Jacques Helesbeux
Mickaël Lecomte
Yann Renaux
Esteban Guichard
Linda Voisine
Claire Yovanopoulos
Bruno Hamon
Laurent Ogé
Pascal Richomme
Mathilde Briard
Tristan Boureau
Séverine Gagné
Pascal Poupard
Romain Berruyer
Romain Berruyer
Aldaulactone – An Original Phytotoxic Secondary Metabolite Involved in the Aggressiveness of Alternaria dauci on Carrot
Frontiers in Plant Science
Alternaria leaf blight
aggressiveness
fungal pathogenicity
in vitro culture
phytotoxin
quantitative disease resistance
author_facet Julia Courtial
Latifa Hamama
Jean-Jacques Helesbeux
Mickaël Lecomte
Yann Renaux
Esteban Guichard
Linda Voisine
Claire Yovanopoulos
Bruno Hamon
Laurent Ogé
Pascal Richomme
Mathilde Briard
Tristan Boureau
Séverine Gagné
Pascal Poupard
Romain Berruyer
Romain Berruyer
author_sort Julia Courtial
title Aldaulactone – An Original Phytotoxic Secondary Metabolite Involved in the Aggressiveness of Alternaria dauci on Carrot
title_short Aldaulactone – An Original Phytotoxic Secondary Metabolite Involved in the Aggressiveness of Alternaria dauci on Carrot
title_full Aldaulactone – An Original Phytotoxic Secondary Metabolite Involved in the Aggressiveness of Alternaria dauci on Carrot
title_fullStr Aldaulactone – An Original Phytotoxic Secondary Metabolite Involved in the Aggressiveness of Alternaria dauci on Carrot
title_full_unstemmed Aldaulactone – An Original Phytotoxic Secondary Metabolite Involved in the Aggressiveness of Alternaria dauci on Carrot
title_sort aldaulactone – an original phytotoxic secondary metabolite involved in the aggressiveness of alternaria dauci on carrot
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Qualitative plant resistance mechanisms and pathogen virulence have been extensively studied since the formulation of the gene-for-gene hypothesis. The mechanisms involved in the quantitative traits of aggressiveness and plant partial resistance are less well-known. Nevertheless, they are prevalent in most plant-necrotrophic pathogen interactions, including the Daucus carota–Alternaria dauci interaction. Phytotoxic metabolite production by the pathogen plays a key role in aggressiveness in these interactions. The aim of the present study was to explore the link between A. dauci aggressiveness and toxin production. We challenged carrot embryogenic cell cultures from a susceptible genotype (H1) and two partially resistant genotypes (I2 and K3) with exudates from A. dauci strains with various aggressiveness levels. Interestingly, A. dauci-resistant carrot genotypes were only affected by exudates from the most aggressive strain in our study (ITA002). Our results highlight a positive link between A. dauci aggressiveness and the fungal exudate cell toxicity. We hypothesize that the fungal exudate toxicity was linked with the amount of toxic compounds produced by the fungus. Interestingly, organic exudate production by the fungus was correlated with aggressiveness. Hence, we further analyzed the fungal organic extract using HPLC, and correlations between the observed peak intensities and fungal aggressiveness were measured. One observed peak was closely correlated with fungal aggressiveness. We succeeded in purifying this peak and NMR analysis revealed that the purified compound was a novel 10-membered benzenediol lactone, a polyketid that we named ‘aldaulactone’. We used a new automated image analysis method and found that aldaulactone was toxic to in vitro cultured plant cells at those concentrations. The effects of both aldaulactone and fungal organic extracts were weaker on I2-resistant carrot cells compared to H1 carrot cells. Taken together, our results suggest that: (i) aldaulactone is a new phytotoxin, (ii) there is a relationship between the amount of aldaulactone produced and fungal aggressiveness, and (iii) carrot resistance to A. dauci involves mechanisms of resistance to aldaulactone.
topic Alternaria leaf blight
aggressiveness
fungal pathogenicity
in vitro culture
phytotoxin
quantitative disease resistance
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2018.00502/full
work_keys_str_mv AT juliacourtial aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT latifahamama aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT jeanjacqueshelesbeux aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT mickaellecomte aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT yannrenaux aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT estebanguichard aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT lindavoisine aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT claireyovanopoulos aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT brunohamon aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT laurentoge aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT pascalrichomme aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT mathildebriard aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT tristanboureau aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT severinegagne aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT pascalpoupard aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT romainberruyer aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
AT romainberruyer aldaulactoneanoriginalphytotoxicsecondarymetaboliteinvolvedintheaggressivenessofalternariadaucioncarrot
_version_ 1725703215412936704
spelling doaj-a989e3dc681543daa5384270e2a1f9e02020-11-24T22:40:47ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2018-05-01910.3389/fpls.2018.00502352983Aldaulactone – An Original Phytotoxic Secondary Metabolite Involved in the Aggressiveness of Alternaria dauci on CarrotJulia Courtial0Latifa Hamama1Jean-Jacques Helesbeux2Mickaël Lecomte3Yann Renaux4Esteban Guichard5Linda Voisine6Claire Yovanopoulos7Bruno Hamon8Laurent Ogé9Pascal Richomme10Mathilde Briard11Tristan Boureau12Séverine Gagné13Pascal Poupard14Romain Berruyer15Romain Berruyer16IRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceSubstances d’Origine Naturelle et Analogues Structuraux, SFR4207 QUASAV, UNIV Angers, Université Bretagne Loire, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceSubstances d’Origine Naturelle et Analogues Structuraux, SFR4207 QUASAV, UNIV Angers, Université Bretagne Loire, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FrancePHENOTIC Platform, IRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceIRHS, INRA, AGROCAMPUS-Ouest, Université d’Angers, SFR 4207 QUASAV, Beaucouzé, FranceDépartement de Biologie, Faculté des Sciences, Université d’Angers, Angers, FranceQualitative plant resistance mechanisms and pathogen virulence have been extensively studied since the formulation of the gene-for-gene hypothesis. The mechanisms involved in the quantitative traits of aggressiveness and plant partial resistance are less well-known. Nevertheless, they are prevalent in most plant-necrotrophic pathogen interactions, including the Daucus carota–Alternaria dauci interaction. Phytotoxic metabolite production by the pathogen plays a key role in aggressiveness in these interactions. The aim of the present study was to explore the link between A. dauci aggressiveness and toxin production. We challenged carrot embryogenic cell cultures from a susceptible genotype (H1) and two partially resistant genotypes (I2 and K3) with exudates from A. dauci strains with various aggressiveness levels. Interestingly, A. dauci-resistant carrot genotypes were only affected by exudates from the most aggressive strain in our study (ITA002). Our results highlight a positive link between A. dauci aggressiveness and the fungal exudate cell toxicity. We hypothesize that the fungal exudate toxicity was linked with the amount of toxic compounds produced by the fungus. Interestingly, organic exudate production by the fungus was correlated with aggressiveness. Hence, we further analyzed the fungal organic extract using HPLC, and correlations between the observed peak intensities and fungal aggressiveness were measured. One observed peak was closely correlated with fungal aggressiveness. We succeeded in purifying this peak and NMR analysis revealed that the purified compound was a novel 10-membered benzenediol lactone, a polyketid that we named ‘aldaulactone’. We used a new automated image analysis method and found that aldaulactone was toxic to in vitro cultured plant cells at those concentrations. The effects of both aldaulactone and fungal organic extracts were weaker on I2-resistant carrot cells compared to H1 carrot cells. Taken together, our results suggest that: (i) aldaulactone is a new phytotoxin, (ii) there is a relationship between the amount of aldaulactone produced and fungal aggressiveness, and (iii) carrot resistance to A. dauci involves mechanisms of resistance to aldaulactone.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpls.2018.00502/fullAlternaria leaf blightaggressivenessfungal pathogenicityin vitro culturephytotoxinquantitative disease resistance