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Genetic alteration of UDP‐rhamnose metabolism in Botrytis cinerea leads to the accumulation of UDP‐KDG that adversely affects development and pathogenicity
Author(s) -
Ma Liang,
Salas Omar,
Bowler Kyle,
OrenYoung Liat,
BarPeled Maor,
Sharon Amir
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
molecular plant pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.945
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1364-3703
pISSN - 1464-6722
DOI - 10.1111/mpp.12398
Subject(s) - biology , rhamnose , gene , mutant , nucleotide sugar , botrytis cinerea , arabidopsis thaliana , virulence , pathogenic fungus , biochemistry , cell wall , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , nucleotide , galactose , botany
Summary Botrytis cinerea is a model plant‐pathogenic fungus that causes grey mould and rot diseases in a wide range of agriculturally important crops. A previous study has identified two enzymes and corresponding genes ( bcdh , bcer ) that are involved in the biochemical transformation of uridine diphosphate (UDP)‐glucose, the major fungal wall nucleotide sugar precursor, to UDP‐rhamnose. We report here that deletion of bcdh , the first biosynthetic gene in the metabolic pathway, or of bcer , the second gene in the pathway, abolishes the production of rhamnose‐containing glycans in these mutant strains. Deletion of bcdh or double deletion of both bcdh and bcer has no apparent effect on fungal development or pathogenicity. Interestingly, deletion of the bcer gene alone adversely affects fungal development, giving rise to altered hyphal growth and morphology, as well as reduced sporulation, sclerotia production and virulence. Treatments with wall stressors suggest the alteration of cell wall integrity. Analysis of nucleotide sugars reveals the accumulation of the UDP‐rhamnose pathway intermediate UDP‐4‐keto‐6‐deoxy‐glucose (UDP‐KDG) in hyphae of the Δ bcer strain. UDP‐KDG could not be detected in hyphae of the wild‐type strain, indicating fast conversion to UDP‐rhamnose by the BcEr enzyme. The correlation between high UDP‐KDG and modified cell wall and developmental defects raises the possibility that high levels of UDP‐KDG result in deleterious effects on cell wall composition, and hence on virulence. This is the first report demonstrating that the accumulation of a minor nucleotide sugar intermediate has such a profound and adverse effect on a fungus. The ability to identify molecules that inhibit Er (also known as NRS/ER) enzymes or mimic UDP‐KDG may lead to the development of new antifungal drugs.

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