Septum-associated microtubule organizing centers within conidia support infectious development by the blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae

•This study provides improved insight into the subcellular cytoskeletal organization of the M. oryzae conidium and appressorium, with implications for the understanding of inter- and intracellular transport and polarity establishment during appressorium development. Cytoplasmic microtubule arrays pl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Fungal genetics and biology 2023-03, Vol.165, p.103768-103768, Article 103768
Hauptverfasser: Rogers, Audra Mae, Egan, Martin John
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•This study provides improved insight into the subcellular cytoskeletal organization of the M. oryzae conidium and appressorium, with implications for the understanding of inter- and intracellular transport and polarity establishment during appressorium development. Cytoplasmic microtubule arrays play important and diverse roles within fungal cells, including serving as molecular highways for motor-driven organelle motility. While the dynamic plus ends of cytoplasmic microtubules are free to explore the cytoplasm through their stochastic growth and shrinkage, their minus ends are nucleated at discrete organizing centers, composed of large multi-subunit protein complexes. The location and composition of these microtubule organizing centers varies depending on genus, cell type, and in some instances cell-cycle stage. Despite their obvious importance, our understanding of the nature, diversity, and regulation of microtubule organizing centers in fungi remains incomplete. Here, using three-color fluorescence microscopy based live-cell imaging, we investigate the organization and dynamic behavior of the microtubule cytoskeleton within infection-related cell types of the filamentous fungus,Magnaporthe oryzae, a highly destructive pathogen of rice and wheat. We provide data to support the idea that cytoplasmic microtubules are nucleated at septa, rather than at nuclear spindle pole bodies, within the three-celled blast conidium, and provide new insight into remodeling of the microtubule cytoskeleton during nuclear division and inheritance. Lastly, we provide a more complete picture of the architecture and subcellular organization of the prototypical blast appressorium, a specialized pressure-generating cell type used to invade host tissue. Taken together, our study provides new insight into microtubule nucleation, organization, and dynamics in specialized and differentiated fungal cell types.
ISSN:1087-1845
1096-0937
DOI:10.1016/j.fgb.2022.103768