A complete toolset for the study of Ustilago bromivora and Brachypodium sp. as a fungal-temperate grass pathosystem

2016 
Fungi cause many diseases in plants, and reduce the yield of important crops like wheat, corn and rice – all of which belong to the family of grasses. Much research into how disease-causing fungi infect plants will look at a given fungus that infects a specific plant in order to understand plant diseases in general. Over the years, scientists have generated suites of research tools to study these pairs of fungi and plants. However, many of these organism pairs (often called “model pathosystems”) have drawbacks when it comes to research in the laboratory, either on the side of the fungus or the side of plant. Brachypodium is a small grass that grows quickly and, unlike crop plants, it grows well in the laboratory. These characteristics make Brachypodium a promising model organism for studying many aspects of plant biology. Recently, a fungus called Ustilago bromivora – which is related to a fungus that infects corn – was reported to infect Brachypodium. This raised the question: could this fungus and this small grass become a new model pathosystem? Rabe, Bosch et al. set out to answer this question and now provide a toolkit that will help to establish U. bromivora and Brachypodium as a new model pathosystem. In all of U. bromivora’s close relatives, two compatible strains must meet and mate before the fungus can infect the plant; first Rabe, Bosch et al. confirmed that this is also the case for U. bromivora. Studying the life cycle of the U. bromivora fungus also unexpectedly revealed that while both mating partners are needed to infect the plant, only one of the strains survives outside of the plant after the infection. This phenomenon, referred to as a “mating type bias”, has been described for a few other related fungi. Next, Rabe, Bosch et al. conducted a genetic screen and identified two compatible strains that can grow without the plant as yeast-like cells. This means that these cells can be manipulated genetically, and indeed protocols to grow and genetically engineer the fungus and plant to address different research questions are included in the toolkit as well. Other new tools include the complete genetic sequence of the fungus with all its genes annotated, and a dataset of which genes are active in U. bromivora growing yeast-like in liquid culture versus those active when the fungus grows as a pathogen inside the plant. Together these new tools and datasets will provide a foundation to study different aspects of the interactions between grasses and disease-causing fungi. This in turn may lead to new methods to reduce fungal growth and reduce yield losses caused by fungal diseases in crop plants. Finally, the discovery that U. bromivora shows a mating type bias could provide a starting point for future studies into sexual reproduction in fungi and how new species arise.
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