Rapid defense mechanism suppression during viral- oomycete disease complex formation

Abstract

Combined infection of the host plant with pathogens involving different parasitic lifestyles may result in synergistic effects that intensify disease symptoms. Understanding the molecular dynamics during concurrent infection provides essential insight into the host response. The transcriptomic pattern of cucumber plants infected with a necrotrophic pathogen, Pythium spinosum, and a biotrophic pathogen, Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus (CGMMV) was studied at different time points, under regimes of single and co-infection. Analysis of CGMMV infection alone revealed a mild influence on host gene expression at the stem base, while the infection by P. spinosum is associated with drastic changes in gene expression. Comparing P. spinosum as a single infecting pathogen with a later co-infection by CGMMV revealed a rapid host response as early as 24 hours post-CGMMV inoculation with a sharp downregulation of genes related to the host defense mechanism against the necrotrophic pathogen. Suppression of the defense mechanism of co-infected plants was followed by severe stress, including 30% plants mortality and an increase of the P. spinosum hyphae. The first evidence of defense recovery against the necrotrophic pathogen only occurred 13 days post-viral infection. These results support the hypothesis that the viral infection of the Pythium pre-infected plants subverted the host defense system and changed the equilibrium obtained with P. spinosum. It also implies a time window in which the plants are most susceptible to P. spinosum after CGMMV infection.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jun 09, 2023
Source ID
10.3389/fpls.2023.1124911

Entities

People

  • Amit M. Philosoph
  • Aviv Dombrovsky
  • Neta Luria
  • Noa Sela
  • Omer Frenkel
  • Yigal Elad

Organizations

  • Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security of Israel

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Biology

Readers

  • Critical Infrastructure Protection in CBRN and WMD Threats.
  • Infectious Disease/Epidemiology
  • Oncology (Cancer Research).