Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
33
result(s) for
"Bradshaw, Rosie E."
Sort by:
Secreted Glycoside Hydrolase Proteins as Effectors and Invasion Patterns of Plant-Associated Fungi and Oomycetes
by
Bradshaw, Rosie E.
,
Henrissat, Bernard
,
Mesarich, Carl H.
in
Carbohydrates
,
Cellulose
,
Colonization
2022
During host colonization, plant-associated microbes, including fungi and oomycetes, deliver a collection of glycoside hydrolases (GHs) to their cell surfaces and surrounding extracellular environments. The number and type of GHs secreted by each organism is typically associated with their lifestyle or mode of nutrient acquisition. Secreted GHs of plant-associated fungi and oomycetes serve a number of different functions, with many of them acting as virulence factors (effectors) to promote microbial host colonization. Specific functions involve, for example, nutrient acquisition, the detoxification of antimicrobial compounds, the manipulation of plant microbiota, and the suppression or prevention of plant immune responses. In contrast, secreted GHs of plant-associated fungi and oomycetes can also activate the plant immune system, either by acting as microbe-associated molecular patterns (MAMPs), or through the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) as a consequence of their enzymatic activity. In this review, we highlight the critical roles that secreted GHs from plant-associated fungi and oomycetes play in plant–microbe interactions, provide an overview of existing knowledge gaps and summarize future directions.
Journal Article
The Venturia inaequalis effector repertoire is dominated by expanded families with predicted structural similarity, but unrelated sequence, to avirulence proteins from other plant-pathogenic fungi
2022
Background
Scab, caused by the biotrophic fungus
Venturia inaequalis
, is the most economically important disease of apples worldwide. During infection,
V. inaequalis
occupies the subcuticular environment, where it secretes virulence factors, termed effectors, to promote host colonization. Consistent with other plant-pathogenic fungi, many of these effectors are expected to be non-enzymatic proteins, some of which can be recognized by corresponding host resistance proteins to activate plant defences, thus acting as avirulence determinants. To develop durable control strategies against scab, a better understanding of the roles that these effector proteins play in promoting subcuticular growth by
V. inaequalis
, as well as in activating, suppressing, or circumventing resistance protein-mediated defences in apple, is required.
Results
We generated the first comprehensive RNA-seq transcriptome of
V. inaequalis
during colonization of apple. Analysis of this transcriptome revealed five temporal waves of gene expression that peaked during early, mid, or mid-late infection. While the number of genes encoding secreted, non-enzymatic proteinaceous effector candidates (ECs) varied in each wave, most belonged to waves that peaked in expression during mid-late infection. Spectral clustering based on sequence similarity determined that the majority of ECs belonged to expanded protein families. To gain insights into function, the tertiary structures of ECs were predicted using AlphaFold2. Strikingly, despite an absence of sequence similarity, many ECs were predicted to have structural similarity to avirulence proteins from other plant-pathogenic fungi, including members of the MAX, LARS, ToxA and FOLD effector families. In addition, several other ECs, including an EC family with sequence similarity to the AvrLm6 avirulence effector from
Leptosphaeria maculans
, were predicted to adopt a KP6-like fold. Thus, proteins with a KP6-like fold represent another structural family of effectors shared among plant-pathogenic fungi.
Conclusions
Our study reveals the transcriptomic profile underpinning subcuticular growth by
V. inaequalis
and provides an enriched list of ECs that can be investigated for roles in virulence and avirulence. Furthermore, our study supports the idea that numerous sequence-unrelated effectors across plant-pathogenic fungi share common structural folds. In doing so, our study gives weight to the hypothesis that many fungal effectors evolved from ancestral genes through duplication, followed by sequence diversification, to produce sequence-unrelated but structurally similar proteins.
Journal Article
Apoplastic effector candidates of a foliar forest pathogen trigger cell death in host and non-host plants
by
Guo, Melissa
,
Bradshaw, Rosie E.
,
Tarallo, Mariana
in
631/114/2410
,
631/326/193/2484
,
631/326/193/2542
2021
Forests are under threat from pests, pathogens, and changing climate. A major forest pathogen worldwide is the hemibiotroph
Dothistroma septosporum
, which causes dothistroma needle blight (DNB) of pines. While
D. septosporum
uses effector proteins to facilitate host infection, it is currently unclear whether any of these effectors are recognised by immune receptors to activate the host immune system. Such information is needed to identify and select disease resistance against
D. septosporum
in pines. We predicted and investigated apoplastic
D. septosporum
candidate effectors (DsCEs) using bioinformatics and plant-based experiments. We discovered DsCEs that trigger cell death in the angiosperm
Nicotiana
spp., indicative of a hypersensitive defence response and suggesting their recognition by immune receptors in non-host plants. In a first for foliar forest pathogens, we developed a novel protein infiltration method to show that tissue-cultured pine shoots can respond with a cell death response to a DsCE, as well as to a reference cell death-inducing protein. The conservation of responses across plant taxa suggests that knowledge of pathogen–angiosperm interactions may also be relevant to pathogen–gymnosperm interactions. These results contribute to our understanding of forest pathogens and may ultimately provide clues to disease immunity in both commercial and natural forests.
Journal Article
Targeted Gene Mutations in the Forest Pathogen Dothistroma septosporum Using CRISPR/Cas9
2022
Dothistroma needle blight, caused by Dothistroma septosporum, has increased in incidence and severity over the last few decades and is now one of the most important global diseases of pines. Disease resistance breeding could be accelerated by knowledge of pathogen virulence factors and their host targets. However, this is hindered due to inefficient targeted gene disruption in D. septosporum, which is required for virulence gene characterisation. Here we report the first successful application of CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing to a Dothideomycete forest pathogen, D. septosporum. Disruption of the dothistromin pathway regulator gene AflR, with a known phenotype, was performed using nonhomologous end-joining repair with an efficiency of >90%. Transformants with a range of disruption mutations in AflR were produced. Disruption of Ds74283, a D. septosporum gene encoding a secreted cell death elicitor, was also achieved using CRISPR/Cas9, by using a specific donor DNA repair template to aid selection where the phenotype was unknown. In this case, 100% of screened transformants were identified as disruptants. In establishing CRISPR/Cas9 as a tool for gene editing in D. septosporum, our research could fast track the functional characterisation of candidate virulence factors in D. septosporum and helps set the foundation for development of this technology in other forest pathogens.
Journal Article
Fragmentation of an aflatoxin-like gene cluster in a forest pathogen
2013
Plant pathogens use a complex arsenal of weapons, such as toxic secondary metabolites, to invade and destroy their hosts. Knowledge of how secondary metabolite pathways evolved is central to understanding the evolution of host specificity. The secondary metabolite dothistromin is structurally similar to aflatoxins and is produced by the fungal pine pathogen Dothistroma septosporum. Our study focused on dothistromin genes, which are widely dispersed across one chromosome, to determine whether this unusual distributed arrangement evolved from an ancestral cluster.
We combined comparative genomics and population genetics approaches to elucidate the origins of the dispersed arrangement of dothistromin genes over a broad evolutionary time-scale at the phylum, class and species levels.
Orthologs of dothistromin genes were found in two major classes of fungi. Their organization is consistent with clustering of core pathway genes in a common ancestor, but with intermediate cluster fragmentation states in the Dothideomycetes fungi. Recombination hotspots in a D. septosporum population matched sites of gene acquisition and cluster fragmentation at higher evolutionary levels.
The results suggest that fragmentation of a larger ancestral cluster gave rise to the arrangement seen in D. septosporum. We propose that cluster fragmentation may facilitate metabolic retooling and subsequent host adaptation of plant pathogens.
Journal Article
Reduced Virulence of an Introduced Forest Pathogen over 50 Years
by
Bradshaw, Rosie E.
,
Ormond, Shannon
,
Cox, Murray P.
in
Blight
,
clonal population
,
Coniferous forests
2019
Pathogen incursions are a major impediment for global forest health. How pathogens and forest trees coexist over time, without pathogens simply killing their long-lived hosts, is a critical but unanswered question. The Dothistroma Needle Blight pathogen Dothistroma septosporum was introduced into New Zealand in the 1960s and remains a low-diversity, asexual population, providing a unique opportunity to analyze the evolution of a forest pathogen. Isolates of D. septosporum collected from commercial pine forests over 50 years were compared at whole-genome and phenotype levels. Limited genome diversity and increased diversification among recent isolates support the premise of a single introduction event. Isolates from the 1960s show significantly elevated virulence against Pinus radiata seedlings and produce higher levels of the virulence factor dothistromin compared to isolates collected in the 1990s and 2000s. However, later isolates have no increased tolerance to copper, used in fungicide treatments of infested forests and traditionally assumed to be a strong selection pressure. The isolated New Zealand population of this forest pathogen therefore appears to have become less virulent over time, likely in part to maintain the viability of its long-lived host. This finding has broad implications for forest health and highlights the benefits of long-term pathogen surveys.
Journal Article
Foliar pine pathogens from different kingdoms share defence-eliciting effector proteins
2025
Dothistroma needle blight, Cyclaneusma needle blight and red needle cast are devastating foliar pine diseases caused by the fungi Dothistroma septosporum and Cyclaneusma minus and the oomycete Phytophthora pluvialis, respectively. These pathogens colonise the host apoplast, secreting effector proteins to promote infection and disease. If these effectors are recognised by corresponding host resistance proteins, they activate the plant immune system to stop pathogen growth. We aimed to identify and characterise effectors that are common to all three pathogens. Using D. septosporum as a starting point, three candidate effectors (CEs) were investigated: Ds69335 (a CAP protein) and Ds131885, both of which have sequence and structural similarity to CEs of C. minus and P. pluvialis, and Ds74283, which adopts a β-trefoil fold and has structural rather than sequence similarity to CEs from all three pathogens. Notably, of the CEs investigated, Ds74283 and Ds131885, as well as their homologues from C. minus and P. pluvialis, elicited chlorosis or cell death in Nicotiana species, with Ds131885 and its homologues also triggering cell death in Pinus radiata. In line with these observed responses being related to activation of the plant immune system, the chlorosis triggered by Ds131885 and its homologues was compromised in a Nicotiana benthamiana mutant lacking the extracellular immune system co-receptor, SOBIR1. Such cross-kingdom, plant immune system-activating effectors, whether similar in sequence or structure, might ultimately enable the selection or engineering of durable, broad-spectrum resistance against foliar pine pathogens
Journal Article
Conservation and expansion of a necrosis‐inducing small secreted protein family from host‐variable phytopathogens of the Sclerotiniaceae
by
Sehrish, Tina
,
Bradshaw, Rosie E.
,
McCarthy, Hannah
in
Amino acids
,
Apoptosis
,
Botrytis cinerea
2020
Fungal effector proteins facilitate host‐plant colonization and have generally been characterized as small secreted proteins (SSPs). We classified and functionally tested SSPs from the secretomes of three closely related necrotrophic phytopathogens: Ciborinia camelliae, Botrytis cinerea, and Sclerotinia sclerotiorum. Alignment of predicted SSPs identified a large protein family that share greater than 41% amino acid identity and that have key characteristics of previously described microbe‐associated molecular patterns (MAMPs). Strikingly, 73 of the 75 SSP family members were predicted within the secretome of the host‐specialist C. camelliae with single‐copy homologs identified in the secretomes of the host generalists S. sclerotiorum and B. cinerea. To explore the potential function of this family of SSPs, 10 of the 73 C. camelliae proteins, together with the single‐copy homologs from S. sclerotiorum (SsSSP3) and B. cinerea (BcSSP2), were cloned and expressed as recombinant proteins. Infiltration of SsSSP3 and BcSSP2 into host tissue induced rapid necrosis. In contrast, only one of the 10 tested C. camelliae SSPs was able to induce a limited amount of necrosis. Analysis of chimeric proteins consisting of domains from both a necrosis‐inducing and a non‐necrosis‐inducing SSP demonstrated that the C‐terminus of the S. sclerotiorum SSP is essential for necrosis‐inducing function. Deletion of the BcSSP2 homolog from B. cinerea did not affect growth or pathogenesis. Thus, this research uncovered a family of highly conserved SSPs present in diverse ascomycetes that exhibit contrasting necrosis‐inducing functions. The C‐terminus of previously uncharacterized small, secreted, cysteine‐rich proteins from three fungal pathogens of the Sclerotiniaceae is responsible for necrosis‐inducing function in plant tissues.
Journal Article
Beyond the genomes of Fulvia fulva (syn. Cladosporium fulvum) and Dothistroma septosporum: New insights into how these fungal pathogens interact with their host plants
by
Schol, Christiaan R.
,
Wit, Pierre J. G. M.
,
Bradshaw, Rosie E.
in
Blight
,
Cell surface
,
Chromosomes
2023
Fulvia fulva and Dothistroma septosporum are closely related apoplastic pathogens with similar lifestyles but different hosts: F. fulva is a pathogen of tomato, whilst D. septosporum is a pathogen of pine trees. In 2012, the first genome sequences of these pathogens were published, with F. fulva and D. septosporum having highly fragmented and near‐complete assemblies, respectively. Since then, significant advances have been made in unravelling their genome architectures. For instance, the genome of F. fulva has now been assembled into 14 chromosomes, 13 of which have synteny with the 14 chromosomes of D. septosporum, suggesting these pathogens are even more closely related than originally thought. Considerable advances have also been made in the identification and functional characterization of virulence factors (e.g., effector proteins and secondary metabolites) from these pathogens, thereby providing new insights into how they promote host colonization or activate plant defence responses. For example, it has now been established that effector proteins from both F. fulva and D. septosporum interact with cell‐surface immune receptors and co‐receptors to activate the plant immune system. Progress has also been made in understanding how F. fulva and D. septosporum have evolved with their host plants, whilst intensive research into pandemics of Dothistroma needle blight in the Northern Hemisphere has shed light on the origins, migration, and genetic diversity of the global D. septosporum population. In this review, we specifically summarize advances made in our understanding of the F. fulva–tomato and D. septosporum–pine pathosystems over the last 10 years. In this review we summarize advances from the last decade in understanding the molecular basis of how the closely related fungal pathogens Fulvia fulva and Dothistroma septosporum interact with their respective tomato and pine hosts.
Journal Article