| Literature DB >> 30519451 |
Lara Schmitz1, Sean McCotter2, Matthias Kretschmer2, James W Kronstad2, Kai Heimel1.
Abstract
Biotrophic fungal pathogens of plants must sense and adapt to the host environment to complete their life cycles. Recent transcriptome studies of the infection of maize by the biotrophic pathogen Ustilago maydis are providing molecular insights into an ordered program of changes in gene expression and the deployment of effectors as well as key features of nutrient acquisition. In particular, the transcriptome data provide a deeper appreciation of the complexity of the transcription factor network that controls the biotrophic program of invasion, proliferation, and sporulation. Additionally, transcriptome analysis during tumor formation, a key late stage in the life cycle, revealed features of the remodeling of host and pathogen metabolism that may support the formation of tremendous numbers of spores. Transcriptome studies are also appearing for other smut species during interactions with their hosts, thereby providing opportunities for comparative approaches to understand biotrophic adaptation.Entities:
Keywords: RNAseq; Ustilago maydis; effectors; metabolism; nutrients; pathogenicity; regulators; transcriptome
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30519451 PMCID: PMC6248262 DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.16404.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: F1000Res ISSN: 2046-1402
Figure 1. Tumor formation on maize by Ustilago maydis.
An infected maize cob found in a cornfield close to Göttingen, Germany, in September 2018. At the end of the growing season, infected kernels give rise to greatly enlarged and bulbous plant tumors filled with black teliospores. Tumors can develop on all aerial parts of the plant but are most prominent in infected cobs.
Figure 2. Regulators, effectors, and metabolism during Ustilago maydis infection of maize.
Overview of transcriptional regulation, the timing of effector function, and metabolic changes and requirements during early, middle, and late stages of the U. maydis–maize interaction. DPI, days post inoculation.