4.3 Article

Transcriptome and proteome analyses of proteases in biotroph fungal pathogen Cladosporium fulvum

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 102, Issue 2, Pages 377-386

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s42161-019-00433-0

Keywords

Fungal proteases; Gene expression; Tomato pathogen; Cladosoprium fulvum; Plant-microbe interaction

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Funding

  1. Wageningen University
  2. Ministry of Science, Research and Technology (MSRT) of Iran

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Proteases are key components of the hydrolytic enzyme arsenal employed by fungal pathogens to invade their host plants. The recent advances in -omics era have facilitated identification of functional proteases involved in plant-fungus interactions. By comparison of the publically available sequences of fungal genomes we found that the number of protease genes present in the genome of Cladosporium fulvum, a biotrophic tomato pathogen, is comparable with that of hemibiotrophs. To identify host plant inducible protease genes and their products, we performed transcriptome and proteome analyses of C. fulvumin vitro and in planta by means of RNA-Seq/RT-qPCR and mass spectrometry. Transcriptome data showed that 14 out of the 59 predicted proteases are expressed during in vitro and in planta growth of C. fulvum, of which nine belong to serine proteases S8 and S10 and the rest belong to metallo- and aspartic proteases. Mass spectrometry confirmed the presence of six proteases at proteome level during plant infection. Expression of limited number of proteases by C. fulvum might sustain biotrophic growth and benefits its stealth pathogenesis.

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