Litcius/Paper detail

A novel partitivirus conferring hypovirulence by affecting vesicle transport in the fungus <i>Colletotrichum</i>

Jun Zi Zhu, Ze Lan Qiu, Bi Da Gao, Xiao Gang Li, Jie Zhong

2024mBio29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Colletotrichum is a kind of economically important phytopathogenic fungi that cause anthracnose disease in a variety of plant species worldwide. We found a novel mycovirus of the Gammapartitiviru s genus and Partitiviridae family from the phytopathogenic fungus Colletotrichum alienum and named it CaPV1. This study revealed that CaPV1 infection significantly decreased host virulence and fitness by affecting mycelial growth, appressorial development, and appressorium turgor. In addition, CaPV1 could also infect other Colletotrichum species, including C. fructicola , C. spaethianum , and C. gloeosporioides , by viral particle transfection and resulting in hypovirulence of these Colletotrichum species. Transcriptomic analysis showed that CaPV1 caused significant transcriptional rewiring of the host fungus C. alienum , especially the genes involved in vesicle transport. Moreover, endocytosis and gene knockout assays demonstrated that the mechanism underlying CaPV1-induced hypovirulence is, at least in part, caused by affecting the vesicle transport of the host fungus. This study provided insights into the mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of Colletotrichum species and mycovirus-fungus interactions, linking the role of mycovirus and fungus vesicle transport systems in shaping fungal pathogenicity.

Topics & Concepts

FungusBiologyVesicleMicrobiologyBotanyBiochemistryMembranePlant and Fungal Interactions ResearchPlant Virus Research StudiesPlant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases