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1.
PLoS Pathog ; 20(9): e1012577, 2024 Sep 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39348406

RESUMO

Microswimmers are single-celled bodies powered by flagella. Typical examples are zoospores, dispersal agents of oomycete plant pathogens that are used to track down hosts and infect. Being motile, zoospores presumably identify infection sites using chemical cues such as sugars, alcohols and amino acids. With high-speed cameras we traced swimming trajectories of Phytophthora zoospores over time and quantified key trajectory parameters to investigate chemotactic responses. Zoospores adapt their native run-and-tumble swimming patterns in response to the amino acid glutamic acid by increasing the rate at which they turn. Simulations predict that tuneable tumble frequencies are sufficient to explain zoospore aggregation, implying positive klinokinesis. Zoospores thus exploit a retention strategy to remain at the plant surface once arriving there. Interference of G-protein mediated signalling affects swimming behaviour. Zoospores of a Phytophthora infestans G⍺-deficient mutant show higher tumbling frequencies but still respond and adapt to glutamic acid, suggesting chemoreception to be intact.

2.
Semin Cell Dev Biol ; 148-149: 13-21, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36792439

RESUMO

Oomycete plant pathogens, such as Phytophthora and Pythium species produce motile dispersal agents called zoospores that actively target host plants. Zoospores are exceptional in their ability to display taxis to chemical, electrical and physical cues to navigate the phyllosphere and reach stomata, wound sites and roots. Many components of root exudates have been shown attractive or repulsive to zoospores. Although some components possess very strong attractiveness, it seems that especially the mix of components exuded by the primary host is most attractive to zoospores. Zoospores actively approach attractants with swimming behaviour reminiscent of other microswimmers. To achieve a unified description of zoospore behaviour when sensing an attractant, we propose the following terms for the successive stages of the homing response: reorientation, approaching, retention and settling. How zoospores sense and process attractants is poorly understood but likely involves signal perception via cell surface receptors. Since zoospores are important for infection, undermining their activity by luring attractants or blocking receptors seem promising strategies for disease control.


Assuntos
Phytophthora , Plantas
3.
Cell Surf ; 8: 100071, 2022 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35059532

RESUMO

Phytophthora infestans, causal agent of late blight in potato and tomato, remains challenging to control. Unravelling its biomechanics of host invasion, and its response to mechanical and chemical stress, could provide new handles to combat this devastating pathogen. Here we introduce two fluorescent molecular sensors, CWP-BDP and NR12S, that reveal the micromechanical response of the cell wall-plasma membrane continuum in P. infestans during invasive growth and upon chemical treatment. When visualized by live-cell imaging, CWP-BDP reports changes in cell wall (CW) porosity while NR12S reports variations in chemical polarity and lipid order in the plasma membrane (PM). During invasive growth, mechanical interactions between the pathogen and a surface reveal clear and localized changes in the structure of the CW. Moreover, the molecular sensors can reveal the effect of chemical treatment to CW and/or PM, thereby revealing the site-of-action of crop protection agents. This mechano-chemical imaging strategy resolves, non-invasively and with high spatio-temporal resolution, how the CW-PM continuum adapts and responds to abiotic stress, and provides information on the dynamics and location of cellular stress responses for which, to date, no other methods are available.

4.
Sci Adv ; 8(23): eabo0875, 2022 Jun 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35687685

RESUMO

Filamentous plant pathogens apply mechanical forces to pierce their hosts surface and penetrate its tissues. Devastating Phytophthora pathogens harness a specialized form of invasive tip growth to slice through the plant surface, wielding their hypha as a microscopic knife. Slicing requires a sharp hyphal tip that is not blunted at the site of the mechanical interaction. How tip shape is controlled, however, is unknown. We uncover an actin-based mechanostat in Phytophthora infestans that controls tip sharpness during penetration. Mechanical stimulation of the hypha leads to the emergence of an aster-like actin configuration, which shows fast, local, and quantitative feedback to the local stress. We evidence that this functions as an adaptive mechanical scaffold that sharpens the invasive weapon and prevents it from blunting. The hyphal tip mechanostat enables the efficient conversion of turgor into localized invasive pressures that are required to achieve host penetration.

5.
Nat Microbiol ; 6(8): 1000-1006, 2021 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34211160

RESUMO

Phytophthora species, classified as oomycetes, are among the most destructive plant pathogens worldwide and pose a substantial threat to food security. Plant pathogens have developed various methods to breach the cuticle and walls of plant cells. For example, plant-pathogenic fungi use a 'brute-force' approach by producing a specialized and fortified invasion organ to generate invasive pressures. Unlike in fungi, the biomechanics of host invasion in oomycetes remains poorly understood. Here, using a combination of surface-deformation imaging, molecular-fracture sensors and modelling, we find that Phytophthora infestans, Phytophthora palmivora and Phytophthora capsici slice through the plant surface to gain entry into host tissues. To distinguish this mode of entry from the brute-force approach of fungi that use appressoria, we name this oomycete entry without appressorium formation 'naifu' invasion. Naifu invasion relies on polarized, non-concentric, force generation onto the surface at an oblique angle, which concentrates stresses at the site of invasion to enable surface breaching. Measurements of surface deformations during invasion of artificial substrates reveal a polarized mechanical geometry that we describe using a mathematical model. We confirm that the same mode of entry is used on real hosts. Naifu invasion uses actin-mediated polarity, surface adherence and turgor generation to enable Phytophthora to invade hosts without requiring specialized organs or vast turgor generation.


Assuntos
Phytophthora infestans/fisiologia , Doenças das Plantas/parasitologia , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno , Plantas/parasitologia
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