| Literature DB >> 28848500 |
Mukesh Meena1, Sanjay K Gupta1, Prashant Swapnil1, Andleeb Zehra1, Manish K Dubey1, Ram S Upadhyay1.
Abstract
Alternaria is an important fungus to study due to their different life style from saprophytes to endophytes and a very successful fungal pathogen that causes diseases to a number of economically important crops. Alternaria species have been well-characterized for the production of different host-specific toxins (HSTs) and non-host specific toxins (nHSTs) which depend upon their physiological and morphological stages. The pathogenicity of Alternaria species depends on host susceptibility or resistance as well as quantitative production of HSTs and nHSTs. These toxins are chemically low molecular weight secondary metabolites (SMs). The effects of toxins are mainly on different parts of cells like mitochondria, chloroplast, plasma membrane, Golgi complex, nucleus, etc. Alternaria species produce several nHSTs such as brefeldin A, tenuazonic acid, tentoxin, and zinniol. HSTs that act in very low concentrations affect only certain plant varieties or genotype and play a role in determining the host range of specificity of plant pathogens. The commonly known HSTs are AAL-, AK-, AM-, AF-, ACR-, and ACT-toxins which are named by their host specificity and these toxins are classified into different family groups. The HSTs are differentiated on the basis of bio-statistical and other molecular analyses. All these toxins have different mode of action, biochemical reactions and signaling mechanisms to cause diseases. Different species of Alternaria produced toxins which reveal its biochemical and genetic effects on itself as well as on its host cells tissues. The genes responsible for the production of HSTs are found on the conditionally dispensable chromosomes (CDCs) which have been well characterized. Different bio-statistical methods like basic local alignment search tool (BLAST) data analysis used for the annotation of gene prediction, pathogenicity-related genes may provide surprising knowledge in present and future.Entities:
Keywords: Alternaria species; conditionally dispensable chromosomes; host-specific toxins; non-host specific toxins; pathogenicity; secondary metabolites
Year: 2017 PMID: 28848500 PMCID: PMC5550700 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.01451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1Chemical structures of HSTs produced by Alternaria species.
Host-specific toxins produced by Alternaria species.
| Alternaria stem canker of tomato | Tomato (Earlypack 7, First) | AAL-toxin Ta and Tb | Aminopentol esters | Aspartate carbamoyl transferase; sphinganine N-acltransferase | Bottini and Gilchrist, | ||
| Brown spot of tangerine | Targerines and Mandarins (Dancy, Emperor, Minneola) | ACT-toxin I and II | Epoxy-decatrienoic esters | Membrane protein | Nishimura and Kohmoto, | ||
| Black spot of strawberry | Strawberry (Morioka-16) | AF-toxin I, II and III | Epoxy-decatrienoic esters | Microsomal phospholipase A2 | Nakatsuka et al., | ||
| Black spot of Japanese pear | Japanese pear (Nijisseiki) | AK-toxin I and II | Epoxy-decatrienoic esters | Sulfhydryl-containing molecules in membrane protein | Nishimura and Kohmoto, | ||
| Leaf spot of rough lemon | Citurs rootstocks (Rough lemon) | ACR(L)-toxin I | Terpenoid | Mitochondria | Gardner et al., | ||
| Alternaria blotch of apple | Apple (Red Gold, Starking) | AM-toxin I, II and III | Cyclic peptide | Membrane protein; chloroplasts | Kohmoto et al., | ||
| Brown spot of tobacco | Tobacco | AT-toxin | – | Mitochondria | Kohmoto et al., | ||
| Black leaf blight of Knapweed | Spotted knapweed | – | Maculosin toxin | Cyclic peptide | Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase | Stierle et al., | |
| Gray leaf spot | Destruxin A, B | – | Vacular H+-ATPase | Bains and Tewari, | |||
| Leaf spot of sunflower | Sunflower | – | AS-toxin I | Tetrapeptide | Liakopoulou-kyriakides et al., | ||
| Black leaf spot of | AB-toxin | Protein | Chaube and Pundhir, | ||||
| – | – | – | ABR-toxin | – | – | Parada et al., | |
| – | – | – | AP-toxin | – | – | Quayyum et al., |
Figure 2Schematic diagram of target sites of HSTs produced by Alternaria species. Ch, chloroplast; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; GA, Golgi apparatus; Mt, mitochondrion; Nu, nucleus; Pd, plasmodesma; Pm, plasma membrane; Vc, vacuole.
Figure 3Mechanism of ACR-toxin sensitivity controlled by receptor transcript processing in mitochondria.