Journal article

Manipulation of plant innate immunity and gibberellin as factor of compatibility in the mutualistic association of barley roots with Piriformospora indica


Authors listSchäfer, Patrick; Pfiffi, Stefanie; Voll, Lars M; Zajic, Doreen; Chandler, Peter M; Waller, Frank; Scholz, Uwe; Pons-Kühnemann, Jörn; Sonnewald, Sophia; Sonnewald, Uwe; Kogel, Karl-Heinz

Publication year2009

Pages461-474

JournalThe Plant Journal

Volume number59

Issue number3

ISSN0960-7412

eISSN1365-313X

Open access statusGreen

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-313X.2009.03887.x

PublisherWiley


Abstract

Fungi of the order Sebacinales (Basidiomycota) are involved in a wide spectrum of mutualistic symbioses with various plants, thereby exhibiting unique potential for biocontrol strategies. Piriformospora indica, a model organism of this fungal order, is able to increase the biomass and grain yield of crop plants, and induces local and systemic resistance to fungal diseases and tolerance to abiotic stress. To elucidate the molecular basis for root colonization, we characterized the interaction of P. indica with barley roots by combining global gene expression profiling, metabolic profiling, and genetic studies. At the metabolic level, we show that fungal colonization reduces the availability of free sugars and amino acids to the root tip. At the transcriptional level, consecutive interaction stages covering pre-penetration-associated events and progressing through to root colonization showed differential regulation of signal perception and transduction components, secondary metabolism, and genes associated with membrane transport. Moreover, we observed stage-specific up-regulation of genes involved in phytohormone metabolism, mainly encompassing gibberellin, auxin and abscisic acid, but salicylic acid-associated gene expression was suppressed. The changes in hormone homoeostasis were accompanied with a general suppression of the plant innate immune system. Further genetic studies showed reduced fungal colonization in mutants that are impaired in gibberellin synthesis as well as perception, and implicate gibberellin as a modulator of the root's basal defence. Our data further reveal the complexity of compatibility mechanisms in host-microbe interactions, and identify gibberellin signaling as potential target for successful fungi.




Authors/Editors




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleSchäfer, P., Pfiffi, S., Voll, L., Zajic, D., Chandler, P., Waller, F., et al. (2009) Manipulation of plant innate immunity and gibberellin as factor of compatibility in the mutualistic association of barley roots with Piriformospora indica, The Plant Journal, 59(3), pp. 461-474. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-313X.2009.03887.x

APA Citation styleSchäfer, P., Pfiffi, S., Voll, L., Zajic, D., Chandler, P., Waller, F., Scholz, U., Pons-Kühnemann, J., Sonnewald, S., Sonnewald, U., & Kogel, K. (2009). Manipulation of plant innate immunity and gibberellin as factor of compatibility in the mutualistic association of barley roots with Piriformospora indica. The Plant Journal. 59(3), 461-474. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-313X.2009.03887.x


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