Exploring potential surrogate systems for studying the early steps of the Sporisorium scitamineum pathogenesis

Phytopathology. 2023 Dec 26. doi: 10.1094/PHYTO-05-23-0156-R. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Despite its global importance as a primary source of table sugar and bioethanol, sugarcane faces a significant threat to its production due to diseases. One of these diseases, the sugarcane smut, involves the emergence of a whip-like structure from the host apical shoot. The slow onset of the disease is the most substantial challenge for researchers to investigate the molecular events leading to resistance or susceptibility. In this study, we explored the early interaction between the smut fungus Sporisorium scitamineum and foliar tissues of the model plants Arabidopsis thaliana and Nicotiana benthamiana. Upon inoculation with the fungus, A. thaliana showed a compatible reaction, producing lesions during fungus colonization, whereas N. benthamiana showed signs of nonhost resistance. In addition, we propose using a 'Sugarcane Detached Leaf Assay' (SDLA) using plants cultivated in vitro to reveal sugarcane smut response outcomes. We used two sugarcane genotypes with known contrasting reactions to smut in the field. Although there is no evidence for smut to infect sugarcane leaves naturally, the SDLA enabled a rapid assessment of disease outcomes. Different symptoms in the detached leaves after inoculation distinguished smut-susceptible and smut-resistant sugarcane genotypes, respectively. Microscopic observations and gene expression analysis of S. scitamineum candidate effectors confirmed the fungal growth and its restriction on the compatible and incompatible interactions, respectively. These findings offer new prospects into the disease phenotyping of S. scitamineum, which could greatly expedite the comprehension of the initial stages of the pathogenesis and predict smut resistance in sugarcane genotypes.

Keywords: Fungal Pathogens; Host Parasite Interactions; Pathogen Effectors; Plant Immune Responses.