Publication | Open Access
The intercellular biotrophic leaf pathogen <i>Cymadothea trifolii</i> locally degrades pectins, but not cellulose or xyloglucan in cell walls of <i>Trifolium repens</i>
20
Citations
63
References
2004
Year
EngineeringBotanyPlant PathologyTrifolium SppCell WallsBiosynthesisTrifolium RepensMicrobial EcologyFungal BiologyMycelial InteractionBiochemistryPlant-microbe InteractionFungal PhysiologyFungal SymbiosisFungal PathogenCell WallBiologyNatural SciencesMicrobiologyHost Cell WallInteraction ApparatusPlant Physiology
The intercellular ascomycetous pathogen Cymadothea trifolii, causing sooty blotch of clover, proliferates within leaves of Trifolium spp. and produces a complex structure called interaction apparatus (IA) in its own hyphae. Opposite the IA the plant plasmalemma invaginates to form a bubble. Both structures are connected by a tube with an electron-dense sheath. Using immunocytochemistry on high-pressure frozen and freeze-substituted samples, we examined several plant and fungal cell wall components, including those in new host wall appositions at the interaction site, as well as a fungal polygalacturonase. Within the tube linking IA and host bubble, labelling was obtained for cellulose and xyloglucan but not for rhamnogalacturonan-I and homogalacturonans. The IA labelled for chitin and beta-1,3-glucans, and for a fungal polygalacturonase. Plant wall appositions reacted with antibodies against callose, xyloglucans and rhamnogalacturonan-I. Cymadothea trifolii partly degrades the host cell wall. Structural elements remain intact, but the pectin matrix is dissolved. A fungal polygalacturonase detected in the IA is probably a key factor in this process. Owing to the presence of chitin and beta-1,3-glucans, the IA itself is considered an apoplastic compartment.
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