4.5 Article

Survival of the fittest: how the rice microbial community forces Sarocladium oryzae into pathogenicity

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/femsec/fiaa253

Keywords

sheath rot; Oryza sativa; helvolic acid; cerulenin; diversity; endophytes

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Funding

  1. Fund for Scientific Research-Flanders (FWO) [G031317N]

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The fungus Sarocladium oryzae causes rice sheath rot and produces two phytotoxins, cerulenin and helvolic acid. The production of helvolic acid correlates with the virulence of the fungus. Different toxin-producing isolates of S. oryzae affect the diversity and composition of rice endophytes, with less virulent isolates increasing diversity and virulent isolates causing shifts in species composition. The endophyte community of healthy rice plants is dominated by Bacillus cereus, which is enriched in lesions produced by low-virulent S. oryzae isolates.
The fungus Sarocladium oryzae (Sawada) causes rice sheath rot and produces the phytotoxins cerulenin and helvolic acid. Both toxins show antimicrobial activity but only helvolic acid production in the rice sheath correlates with virulence. Sarocladium oryzae isolates that differ in their toxin production were used to study their interaction with the rice culturable bacterial endophyte community. The diversity and community structure was defined in the edge of sheath rot lesions, followed by a null model-based co-occurrence analysis to discover pairwise interactions. Non-random pairs were co-cultured to study the nature of the interactions and the role of the toxins herein. Compared to healthy sheaths, endophyte diversity strongly increased when infected with the least virulent S. oryzae isolates producing low amounts of toxins. Virulent S. oryzae isolates did not affect diversity but caused strong shifts in species composition. The endophyte community of healthy rice plants was dominated by B. cereus. This bacterium was enriched in lesions produced by low-virulent S. oryzae isolates and caused hyphal lysis. Contrarily, helvolic acid producers eliminated this bacterium from the sheath endosphere. We conclude that S. oryzae needs to produce antibiotics to defend itself against antagonistic rice endophytes to successfully colonize and infect the rice sheath.

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