4.7 Article

Patulin is a cultivar-dependent aggressiveness factor favouring the colonization of apples by Penicillium expansum

Journal

MOLECULAR PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages 920-930

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/mpp.12338

Keywords

aggressiveness factor; apples; mycotoxin; patulin; Penicillium expansum; post-harvest disease

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministere de l'Enseignement Superieur et de la Recherche (France)
  2. National Council for Scientific Research (CNRS) Lebanon
  3. Research Council of Saint-Joseph University, Lebanon

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The blue mould decay of apples is caused by Penicillium expansum and is associated with contamination by patulin, a worldwide regulated mycotoxin. Recently, a cluster of 15 genes (patA-patO) involved in patulin biosynthesis was identified in P. expansum. blast analysis revealed that patL encodes a Cys(6) zinc finger regulatory factor. The deletion of patL caused a drastic decrease in the expression of all pat genes, leading to an absence of patulin production. Pathogenicity studies performed on 13 apple varieties indicated that the PepatL strain could still infect apples, but the intensity of symptoms was weaker compared with the wild-type strain. A lower growth rate was observed in the PepatL strain when this strain was grown on nine of the 13 apple varieties tested. In the complemented PepatL:patL strain, the ability to grow normally in apple and the production of patulin were restored. Our results clearly demonstrate that patulin is not indispensable in the initiation of the disease, but acts as a cultivar-dependent aggressiveness factor for P. expansum. This conclusion was strengthened by the fact that the addition of patulin to apple infected by the PepatL mutant restored the normal fungal colonization in apple.

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