Pyricularia oryzae : Lab star and field scourge

Archive ouverte

Baudin, Maël | Naour--Vernet, Marie Le | Gladieux, Pierre | Tharreau, Didier | Lebrun, Marc‐henri | Lambou, Karine | Leys, Marie | Fournier, Elisabeth | Cesari, Stella | Kroj, Thomas

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. Pyricularia oryzae (syn. Magnaporthe oryzae ), is a filamentous ascomycete that causes a major disease called blast on cereal crops, as well as on a wide variety of wild and cultivated grasses. Blast diseases have a tremendous impact worldwide particularly on rice and on wheat, where the disease emerged in South America in the 1980s, before spreading to Asia and Africa. Its economic importance, coupled with its amenability to molecular and genetic manipulation, have inspired extensive research efforts aiming at understanding its biology and evolution. In the past 40 years, this plant‐pathogenic fungus has emerged as a major model in molecular plant–microbe interactions. In this review, we focus on the clarification of the taxonomy and genetic structure of the species and its host range determinants. We also discuss recent molecular studies deciphering its lifecycle. Taxonomy Kingdom: Fungi , phylum: Ascomycota , sub‐phylum: Pezizomycotina , class: Sordariomycetes , order: Magnaporthales , family: Pyriculariaceae , genus: Pyricularia. Host range P. oryzae has the ability to infect a wide range of Poaceae . It is structured into different host‐specialized lineages that are each associated with a few host plant genera. The fungus is best known to cause tremendous damage to rice crops, but it can also attack other economically important crops such as wheat, maize, barley, and finger millet. Disease symptoms P. oryzae can cause necrotic lesions or bleaching on all aerial parts of its host plants, including leaf blades, sheaths, and inflorescences (panicles, spikes, and seeds). Characteristic symptoms on leaves are diamond‐shaped silver lesions that often have a brown margin and whose appearance is influenced by numerous factors such as the plant genotype and environmental conditions. USEFUL WEBSITES Resources URL Genomic data repositories http://genome.jouy.inra.fr/gemo/ Genomic data repositories http://openriceblast.org/ Genomic data repositories http://openwheatblast.net/ Genome browser for fungi (including P. oryzae ) http://fungi.ensembl.org/index.html Comparative genomics database https://mycocosm.jgi.doe.gov/mycocosm/home T‐DNA mutant database http://atmt.snu.kr/ T‐DNA mutant database http://www.phi‐base.org/ SNP and expression data https://fungidb.org/fungidb/app/

Suggestions

Du même auteur

The unconventional resistance protein PTR recognizes the Magnaporthe oryzae effector AVR-Pita in an allele-specific manner

Archive ouverte | Xiao, Gui | CCSD

International audience. Blast disease caused by the fungus Magnaporthe oryzae is one of the most devastating rice diseases. Disease resistance genes such as Pi-ta or Pi-ta2 are critical in protecting rice production...

The structural landscape and diversity of Pyricularia oryzae MAX effectors revisited

Archive ouverte | Lahfa, Mounia | CCSD

ABSTRACT Plant pathogenic fungi secrete a wide variety of small proteins, named effectors. Magnaporthe AVRs and ToxB-like (MAX) effectors constitute a superfamily of secreted proteins widely distributed in Pyricularia (syn. Magnap...

Pathogen effectors and plant immunity determine specialization of the blast fungus to rice subspecies

Archive ouverte | Liao, Jingjing | CCSD

BGPI : équipe 4 et 5. Understanding how fungi specialize on their plant host is crucial for developing sustainable disease control. A traditional, centuries-old rice agro-system of the Yuanyang terraces was used as ...

Chargement des enrichissements...