4.7 Article

Peroxisomal fission is induced during appressorium formation and is required for full virulence of the rice blast fungus

Journal

MOLECULAR PLANT PATHOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages 222-237

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/mpp.12395

Keywords

appressorium; fatty acid; Magnaporthe oryzae; beta-oxidation; peroxisomal proliferation

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Sciences and Technology, China [2012CB114000]

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Peroxisomes are involved in various metabolic processes and are important for virulence in different pathogenic fungi. How peroxisomes rapidly emerge in the appressorium during fungal infection is poorly understood. Here, we describe a gene, PEF1, which can regulate peroxisome formation in the appressorium by controlling peroxisomal fission, and is required for plant infection in the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae. Targeted deletion of PEF1 resulted in a reduction in virulence and a delay in penetration and invasive growth in host cells. PEF1 was particularly expressed during appressorial development, and its encoding protein was co-localized with peroxisomes during appressorial development. Compared with the massive vesicle-shaped peroxisomes formed in the wild-type appressorium, the Delta pef1 mutant could only form stringy linked immature peroxisomes, suggesting that PEF1 was involved in peroxisomal fission during appressorium formation. We also found that the Delta pef1 mutant could not utilize fatty acids efficiently, which can improve significantly the expression level of PEF1 and induce peroxisomal fission. As expected, the Delta pef1 mutant showed reduced intracellular production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) during appressorium formation and induced ROS accumulation in host cells during infection. Taken together, PEF1-mediated peroxisomal fission is important for fungal infection by controlling the number of peroxisomes in the appressorium.

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