Defects in the Ferroxidase That Participates in the Reductive Iron Assimilation System Results in Hypervirulence in <i>Botrytis Cinerea</i>
Esteban Vasquez-Montaño, Gustavo Hoppe, Andrea Vega, Consuelo Olivares-Yáñez, Paulo Canessa
Abstract
The plant-pathogenic fungus B. cinerea causes enormous economic losses, estimated at anywhere between $10 billion and $100 billion worldwide, under both pre- and postharvest conditions. Here, we present the characterization of a loss-of-function mutant in a component involved in iron acquisition that displays hypervirulence. While in different microbial systems iron uptake mechanisms appear to be critical to achieve full pathogenic potential, we found that the absence of the ferroxidase that is part of the reductive iron assimilation system leads to hypervirulence in this fungus. This is an unusual and rather underrepresented phenotype, which can be modulated by iron levels in the plant and provides an unexpected link between iron acquisition, reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, and pathogenesis in the Botrytis -plant interaction.