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Botrytis cinerea identifies host plants via the recognition of antifungal capsidiol to induce expression of a specific detoxification gene.


ABSTRACT: The gray mold pathogen Botrytis cinerea has a broad host range, causing disease in >400 plant species, but it is not known how this pathogen evolved this polyxenous nature. Botrytis cinerea can metabolize a wide range of phytoalexins, including the stilbenoid resveratrol in grape, and the sesquiterpenoids capsidiol in tobacco and rishitin in potato and tomato. In this study, we analyzed the metabolism of sesquiterpenoid phytoalexins by B. cinerea. Capsidiol was dehydrogenated to capsenone, which was then further oxidized, while rishitin was directly oxidized to epoxy- or hydroxyrishitins, indicating that B. cinerea has separate mechanisms to detoxify structurally similar sesquiterpenoid phytoalexins. RNA-seq analysis revealed that a distinct set of genes were induced in B. cinerea when treated with capsidiol or rishitin, suggesting that B. cinerea can distinguish structurally similar phytoalexins to activate appropriate detoxification mechanisms. The gene most highly upregulated by capsidiol treatment encoded a dehydrogenase, designated Bccpdh. Heterologous expression of Bccpdh in a capsidiol-sensitive plant symbiotic fungus, Epichloë festucae, resulted in an acquired tolerance of capsidiol and the ability to metabolize capsidiol to capsenone, while B. cinerea Δbccpdh mutants became relatively sensitive to capsidiol. The Δbccpdh mutant showed reduced virulence on the capsidiol producing Nicotiana and Capsicum species but remained fully pathogenic on potato and tomato. Homologs of Bccpdh are found in taxonomically distant Ascomycota fungi but not in related Leotiomycetes species, suggesting that B. cinerea acquired the ancestral Bccpdh by horizontal gene transfer, thereby extending the pathogenic host range of this polyxenous pathogen to capsidiol-producing plant species.

SUBMITTER: Kuroyanagi T 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9802192 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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<i>Botrytis cinerea</i> identifies host plants via the recognition of antifungal capsidiol to induce expression of a specific detoxification gene.

Kuroyanagi Teruhiko T   Bulasag Abriel Salaria AS   Fukushima Keita K   Ashida Akira A   Suzuki Takamasa T   Tanaka Aiko A   Camagna Maurizio M   Sato Ikuo I   Chiba Sotaro S   Ojika Makoto M   Takemoto Daigo D  

PNAS nexus 20221101 5


The gray mold pathogen <i>Botrytis cinerea</i> has a broad host range, causing disease in >400 plant species, but it is not known how this pathogen evolved this polyxenous nature. <i>Botrytis cinerea</i> can metabolize a wide range of phytoalexins, including the stilbenoid resveratrol in grape, and the sesquiterpenoids capsidiol in tobacco and rishitin in potato and tomato. In this study, we analyzed the metabolism of sesquiterpenoid phytoalexins by <i>B. cinerea</i>. Capsidiol was dehydrogenate  ...[more]

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