Fatal attraction of Caenorhabditis elegans to predatory fungi through 6-methyl-salicylic acid

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Abstract

Salicylic acid is a phenolic phytohormone which controls plant growth and development. A methyl ester (MSA) derivative thereof is volatile and involved in plant-insect or plant-plant communication. Here we show that the nematode-trapping fungus Duddingtonia flagrans uses a methyl-salicylic acid isomer, 6-MSA as morphogen for spatiotemporal control of trap formation and as chemoattractant to lure Caenorhabditis elegans into fungal colonies. 6-MSA is the product of a polyketide synthase and an intermediate in the biosynthesis of arthrosporols. The polyketide synthase (ArtA), produces 6-MSA in hyphal tips, and is uncoupled from other enzymes required for the conversion of 6-MSA to arthrosporols, which are produced in older hyphae. 6-MSA and arthrosporols both block trap formation. The presence of nematodes inhibits 6-MSA and arthrosporol biosyntheses and thereby enables trap formation. 6-MSA and arthrosporols are thus morphogens with some functions similar to quorum-sensing molecules. We show that 6-MSA is important in interkingdom communication between fungi and nematodes.

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Yu, X., Hu, X., Pop, M., Wernet, N., Kirschhöfer, F., Brenner-Weiß, G., … Fischer, R. (2021). Fatal attraction of Caenorhabditis elegans to predatory fungi through 6-methyl-salicylic acid. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-25535-1

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