Exploring de novo specificity: the Pyrenophora tritici-repentis–barley interaction

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Abstract

Pyrenophora tritici-repentis (Ptr) is a destructive fungal pathogen of wheat worldwide. In addition to wheat, Ptr has been isolated from various other hosts in the family Poaceae, yet the nature of its interaction with those hosts is unknown. The Ptr–barley relationship was explored and the existence of a specific interaction between Ptr and barley is described for the first time; symptom development on several barley genotypes was evaluated in bioassays and by toxin infiltration into barley leaves. Ptr ToxB-producing isolates of the fungus were able to cause significant damage when inoculated onto certain barley genotypes, and Ptr ToxB was able to induce chlorosis in a highly selective manner when infiltrated into those same genotypes. Ptr–barley specificity is subtle and can break with slight changes in temperature after infection. To understand the infection process in barley, a cytological analysis and in planta fungal biomass estimation using quantitative PCR were performed. The fungus penetrates through the host epidermal cells and advances to colonize the mesophyll layer intercellularly, with the infection process on barley closely resembling that on wheat. Here, evidence is provided for a specific interaction between barley and Ptr, expanding understanding of Ptr host specificity and breaking the assumption that the highest level of specificity seen with Ptr is restricted to particular genotypes of the wheat host.

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Aboukhaddour, R., & Strelkov, S. E. (2016). Exploring de novo specificity: the Pyrenophora tritici-repentis–barley interaction. Plant Pathology, 65(8), 1347–1357. https://doi.org/10.1111/ppa.12500

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