A fungal endophyte induces transcription of genes encoding a redundant fungicide pathway in its host plant

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-13-93

Language of the publication
English
Date
2013-06-26
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Soliman, Sameh S. M.
  • Trobacher, Christopher P.
  • Tsao, Rong
  • Greenwood, John S.
  • Raizada, Manish N.
Publisher
Springer Nature

Abstract

Background Taxol is an anti-cancer drug harvested from Taxus trees, proposed ecologically to act as a fungicide. Taxus is host to fungal endophytes, defined as organisms that inhabit plants without causing disease. The Taxus endophytes have been shown to synthesize Taxol in vitro, providing Taxus with a second potential biosynthetic route for this protective metabolite. Taxol levels in plants vary 125-fold between individual trees, but the underlying reason has remained unknown. Results Comparing Taxus trees or branches within a tree, correlations were observed between Taxol content, and quantity of its resident Taxol-producing endophyte, Paraconiothyrium SSM001. Depletion of fungal endophyte in planta by fungicide reduced plant Taxol accumulation. Fungicide treatment of intact plants caused concomitant decreases in transcript and/or protein levels corresponding to two critical genes required for plant Taxol biosynthesis. Taxol showed fungicidal activity against fungal pathogens of conifer wood, the natural habitat of the Taxol-producing endophyte. Consistent with other Taxol-producing endophytes, SSM001 was resistant to Taxol. Conclusions These results suggest that the variation in Taxol content between intact Taxus plants and/or tissues is at least in part caused by varying degrees of transcriptional elicitation of plant Taxol biosynthetic genes by its Taxol-producing endophyte. As Taxol is a fungicide, and the endophyte is resistant to Taxol, we discuss how this endophyte strategy may be to prevent colonization by its fungal competitors but at minimal metabolic cost to itself.

Subject

  • Plants,
  • Fungicides

Keywords

  • Taxus,
  • Fungi,
  • Endophytes,
  • Paclitaxel,
  • Biosynthesis,
  • Antifungal agents

Rights

Pagination

1-10

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
1471-2229

Article

Journal title
BMC Plant Biology
Journal volume
13
Article number
93
Accepted date
2013-06-11
Submitted date
2013-02-01

Citation(s)

Soliman, S. S. M., Trobacher, C. P., Tsao, R., Greenwood, J. S., & Raizada, M. N. (2013). A fungal endophyte induces transcription of genes encoding a redundant fungicide pathway in its host plant. BMC Plant Biology, 13, Article 93. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-13-93

URI

Collection(s)

Plants and weeds

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