Phytohormones: the chemical language in Magnaporthe oryzae-rice pathosystem

Mycology. 2018 Jun 12;9(3):233-237. doi: 10.1080/21501203.2018.1483441. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Phytohormones (also named as plant hormones) are chemicals produced by plants in order to modulate various aspects of plant development, stress responses and defence. Recent studies revealed that fungi can also produce phytohormones or phytohormone-mimiking molecules, while it remains poorly understood about the details in the role and regulatory mechanism of such fungal produced phytohormonal molecules in plant-fungus interactions. The rice-blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae imposes a great threat to global food security. Intensive investigation has been conducted to elucidate M. oryzae pathogenicity and rice (Oryza sativa L.) defense mechanism against blast disease, in order to provide theoretical basis and/or identify potential target(s) for developing novel disease control strategies, as well as for breeding of resistance varieties. Phytohormones have been demonstrated to play conserved and divergent roles in fine-tuning the balance of rice growth and immunity towards M. oryzae. Meanwhile, M. oryzae evolved elaborate strategy to manipulate the rice phytohormones metabolism, or even directly produce and secrete phytohormones, during their invasion process. In this review, we discuss the chemical communication in term of phytohormones in M. oryzae-rice pathosystem.

Keywords: Fungal-plant interaction; defense response; inter-kingdom communication; phytohormones.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the National Basic Research Program of China [973 Program, grant number 2015CB150600]; PRC Ministry of Science and Technology.