Host Tissue Environment Directs Activities Of An Epichloe Endophyte, While It Induces Systemic Hormone And Defense Responses In Its Native Perennial Ryegrass Host

Jan Schmid, Robert Day, Ningxin Zhang, Pierre-Yves Dupont, Murray P. Cox, Christopher L. Schardl, Niki Minards, Mauro Truglio, Neil Moore, Daniel R. Harris, Yanfei Zhou

MOLECULAR PLANT-MICROBE INTERACTIONS(2017)

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摘要
Increased resilience of pasture grasses mediated by fungal Epichloe endophytes is crucial to pastoral industries. The underlying mechanisms are only partially understood and likely involve very different activities of the endophyte in different plant tissues and responses of the plant to these. We analyzed the transcriptomes of Epichloe festucae and its host, Lolium perenne, in host tissues of different function and developmental stages. The endophyte contributed approximately 10x more to the transcriptomes than to the biomass of infected tissues. Proliferating mycelium in growing host tissues highly expressed genes involved in hyphal growth. Nonproliferating mycelium in mature plant tissues, transcriptionally equally active, highly expressed genes involved in synthesizing antiherbivore compounds. Transcripts from the latter accounted for 4 % of fungal transcripts. Endophyte infection systemically but moderately increased transcription of L perenne genes with roles in hormone biosynthesis and perception as well as stress and pathogen resistance while reducing expression of genes involved in photosynthesis. There was a good correlation between transcriptome-based observations and physiological observations. Our data indicate that the fitness-enhancing effects of the endophyte are based both on its biosynthetic activities, predominantly in mature host tissues, and also on systemic alteration of the host's hormonal responses and induction of stress response genes.
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native perennial ryegrass host,endophyte,systemic hormone
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