4.5 Article

PATHOGENESIS OF BRYOPHYTE HOSTS BY THE ASCOMYCETE ATRADIDYMELLA MUSCIVORA

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
Volume 96, Issue 7, Pages 1274-1280

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.0800239

Keywords

bryophilous; cell wall degradation; host response; microniche; papilla; pathogenesis; Phoma muscivora; stroma reduction

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. Canadian Graduate Scholarship (CGS)
  3. NSERC-CGS
  4. Alberta Ingenuity Fund (AIF) Incentive Award
  5. Alberta Conservation Association (ACA)

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Atradidymella muscivora (Pleosporales) is a bryophyte pathogen that infects the mosses Aulacomnium palustre. Hylocomium splendens, and Polytrichum juniperinum. Light and scanning electron microscopy and extracellular enzyme production were used to characterize the interactions between this fungus and its native hosts and the model host Funaria hygrometrica. Penetration was direct via hyphae or appressoria, and hosts responded by forming layered, darkly pigmented deposits at penetration sites, similar to the papillae formed by vascular plants in response to fungal infection. Infected hosts gradually became chlorotic as hyphae grew intracellularly, presumably killing host cells. Pycnidia of the Phoma anamorph (P muscivora) and uniloculate pseudothecia were initiated as tightly packed masses of stromatic dematiaceous hyphae within a single host cell. Mature pycnidia and pseudothecia were erumpent. A new microniche among bryophilous fungi is described, whereby A. muscivora supplants the gemmae of Aul. palustre and exploits the normal nutrient-flow of the moss gametophyte. Atradidymella muscivora produced both cellulases and soluble polyphenolic oxidases, allowing it to also function as a saprobe and degrade the cell walls of bryophytes. The saprophytic and pathogenic abilities of A. muscivora suggest it may play a role in nutrient cycling, population dynamics, and small-scale disturbances in boreal ecosystems.

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