A specific fungal transcription factor controls effector gene expression and orchestrates the establishment of the necrotrophic pathogen lifestyle on wheat
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Jones, Darcy A. B.
John, Evan
Rybak, Kasia
Phan, Huyen T T
Singh, Karam
Lin, Shao-Yu
Solomon, Peter
Oliver, Richard P
Tan, Kar-Chun
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Nature Publishing Group
Abstract
The fungus Parastagonospora nodorum infects wheat through the use of necrotrophic efector (NE)
proteins that cause host-specifc tissue necrosis. The Zn2Cys6 transcription factor PnPf2 positively
regulates NE gene expression and is required for virulence on wheat. Little is known about other
downstream targets of PnPf2. We compared the transcriptomes of the P. nodorum wildtype and a strain
deleted in PnPf2 (pf2-69) during in vitro growth and host infection to further elucidate targets of PnPf2
signalling. Gene ontology enrichment analysis of the diferentially expressed (DE) genes revealed that
genes associated with plant cell wall degradation and proteolysis were enriched in down-regulated
DE gene sets in pf2-69 compared to SN15. In contrast, genes associated with redox control, nutrient
and ion transport were up-regulated in the mutant. Further analysis of the DE gene set revealed that
PnPf2 positively regulates twelve genes that encode efector-like proteins. Two of these genes encode
proteins with homology to previously characterised efectors in other fungal phytopathogens. In
addition to modulating efector gene expression, PnPf2 may play a broader role in the establishment
of a necrotrophic lifestyle by orchestrating the expression of genes associated with plant cell wall
degradation and nutrient assimilation.
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Scientific Reports
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