4.4 Article

Grapevine xylem response to fungi involved in trunk diseases

Journal

ANNALS OF APPLIED BIOLOGY
Volume 169, Issue 1, Pages 116-124

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/aab.12285

Keywords

Fungi; grapevine; lignin degradation; manganese peroxidase; phenolic compounds; trunk disease; tyloses

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Grapevine trunk diseases (GTD), caused by a wide range of different fungi, are responsible for decline and productivity losses in vines at all growth stages. Grapevine responses to fungal attack include morphological and physiochemical defence mechanisms in the vascular system to reduce fungal infections. However, the extent to which these responses could control further spread by GTD-fungi in the xylem vessels is poorly known. This study shows the formation of tyloses inside xylem vessels of diseased grapevines, as well as extracellular ligninolytic activities [lignin peroxidase, manganese peroxidase (MnP) and/or laccase] exhibited by some GTD-fungi isolated here from symptomatic grapevines. In particular, Botryosphaeriaceae spp. and Phaeoacremonium minimum showed all three lignin-degrading enzymatic activities. We also examined whether selected vine phenolic compounds, often located in the vascular system in response to fungal infection, could affect the lignin-degrading activity from those GTD-fungi as well as fungal colonisation. We found that phenolic compounds appeared to inhibit MnP activity, in addition to reducing fungal growth by causing anomalies in the hyphae morphology. Our results support that affected grapevines can initiate the tylosis formation in order to constrain fungi in the xylem vessels, while highlight the complementary action of the phenolic compounds to inhibit the fungi growth and colonisation. Phenolic compounds are therefore likely to have important role in alternative strategies for preventing trunk diseases.

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