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Título
Carbon regulation of environmental pH by secreted small molecules that modulate pathogenicity in phytopathogenic fungi
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Carbon regulation of pathogenicity
Pathogenicity
pH regulation
Clasificación UNESCO
3108 Fitopatología
Fecha de publicación
2016
Editor
Molecular Plant Pathology
Citación
Bi, F., Barad, S., Ment, D., Luria, N., Dubey, A., Casado, V., Glam, N., Mínguez, J.D., Espeso, E.A., Fluhr, R. and Prusky, D. (2016), Carbon regulation of environmental pH by secreted small molecules that modulate pathogenicity in phytopathogenic fungi. Molecular Plant Pathology, 17: 1178-1195. https://doi.org/10.1111/mpp.12355
Resumen
[EN]Fruit pathogens can contribute to the acidification or alkalinization of the host environment. This capability has been used to divide fungal pathogens into acidifying and/or alkalinizing classes. Here, we show that diverse classes of fungal pathogens—Colletotrichum gloeosporioides, Penicillium expansum, Aspergillus nidulans and Fusarium oxysporum—secrete small pH-affecting molecules. These molecules modify the environmental pH, which dictates acidic or alkaline colonizing strategies, and induce the expression of PACC-dependent genes. We show that, in many organisms, acidification is induced under carbon excess, i.e. 175 mm sucrose (the most abundant sugar in fruits). In contrast, alkalinization occurs under conditions of carbon deprivation, i.e. less than 15 mm sucrose. The carbon source is metabolized by glucose oxidase (gox2) to gluconic acid, contributing to medium acidification, whereas catalysed deamination of non-preferred carbon sources, such as the amino acid glutamate, by glutamate dehydrogenase 2 (gdh2), results in the secretion of ammonia.
URI
ISSN
1464-6722
DOI
10.1111/mpp.12355
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