Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Virulence-related metabolism is activated in <i>Botrytis cinerea</i> mostly in the interaction with tolerant green grapes that remain largely unaffected in contrast with susceptible green grapes

12

Citations

69

References

2022

Year

Abstract

<i>Botrytis cinerea</i> is responsible for the gray mold disease, severely affecting <i>Vitis vinifera</i> grapevine and hundreds of other economically important crops. However, many mechanisms of this fruit-pathogen interaction remain unknown. The combined analysis of the transcriptome and metabolome of green fruits infected with <i>B. cinerea</i> from susceptible and tolerant genotypes was never performed in any fleshy fruit, mostly because green fruits are widely accepted to be resistant to this fungus. In this work, peppercorn-sized fruits were infected in the field or mock-treated, and berries were collected at green (EL32) stage from a susceptible (Trincadeira) and a tolerant (Syrah) variety. RNAseq and GC-MS data suggested that Syrah exhibited a pre-activated/basal defense relying on specific signaling pathways, hormonal regulation, namely jasmonate and ethylene metabolisms, and linked to phenylpropanoid metabolism. In addition, putative defensive metabolites such as shikimic, ursolic/ oleanolic, and <i>trans</i>-4-hydroxy cinnamic acids, and epigallocatechin were more abundant in Syrah than Trincadeira before infection. On the other hand, Trincadeira underwent relevant metabolic reprogramming upon infection but was unable to contain disease progression. RNA-seq analysis of the fungus <i>in planta</i> revealed an opposite scenario with higher gene expression activity within <i>B. cinerea</i> during infection of the tolerant cultivar and less activity in infected Trincadeira berries. The results suggested an activated virulence state during interaction with the tolerant cultivar without visible disease symptoms. Together, this study brings novel insights related to early infection strategies of <i>B. cinerea</i> and the green berry defense against necrotrophic fungi.

References

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