Botrytis cinerea detoxifies the sesquiterpenoid phytoalexin rishitin through multiple metabolizing pathways

•Botrytis cinerea has tolerance to rishitin, the phytoalexin produced by potato.•Botrytis cinerea can metabolize rishitin to at least 6 different forms.•Structures of 6 rishitin metabolites by B. cinerea were determined.•Six rishitin metabolites showed significantly reduced toxicity to potato pathog...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Fungal genetics and biology 2024-06, Vol.172, p.103895-103895, Article 103895
Hauptverfasser: Bulasag, Abriel Salaria, Ashida, Akira, Miura, Atsushi, Pring, Sreynich, Kuroyanagi, Teruhiko, Camagna, Maurizio, Tanaka, Aiko, Sato, Ikuo, Chiba, Sotaro, Ojika, Makoto, Takemoto, Daigo
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:•Botrytis cinerea has tolerance to rishitin, the phytoalexin produced by potato.•Botrytis cinerea can metabolize rishitin to at least 6 different forms.•Structures of 6 rishitin metabolites by B. cinerea were determined.•Six rishitin metabolites showed significantly reduced toxicity to potato pathogens. Botrytis cinerea is a necrotrophic pathogen that infects across a broad range of plant hosts, including high-impact crop species. Its generalist necrotrophic behavior stems from its ability to detoxify structurally diverse phytoalexins. The current study aims to provide evidence of the ability of B. cinerea to tolerate the sesquiterpenoid phytoalexin rishitin, which is produced by potato and tomato. While the growth of potato pathogens Phytophthora infestans (late blight) and Alternaria solani (early blight) was severely inhibited by rishitin, B. cinerea was tolerant to rishitin. After incubation of rishitin with the mycelia of B. cinerea, it was metabolized to at least six oxidized forms. Structural analysis of these purified rishitin metabolites revealed a variety of oxidative metabolism including hydroxylation at C7 or C12, ketone formation at C5, and dihydroxylation at the 10,11-olefin. Six rishitin metabolites showed reduced toxicity to P. infestans and A. solani, indicating that B. cinerea has at least 5 distinct enzymatic reactions to detoxify rishitin. Four host-specialized phytopathogenic Botrytis species, namely B. elliptica, B. allii, B. squamosa, and B. tulipae also had at least a partial ability to metabolize rishitin as B. cinerea, but their metabolic capacity was significantly weaker than that of B. cinerea. These results suggest that the ability of B. cinerea to rapidly metabolize rishitin through multiple detoxification mechanisms could be critical for its pathogenicity in potato and tomato.
ISSN:1087-1845
1096-0937
DOI:10.1016/j.fgb.2024.103895