Plant defense against pathogens includes a range of mechanisms, including, but not limited to, genetic resistance, pathogen-antagonizing endophytes, and pathogen competitors. The relative importance of each mechanism can be expressed in a hierarchical view of defense. Several recent studies have shown that pathogen antagonism is inconsistently expressed within the plant defense hierarchy. Our hypothesis is that the hierarchy is governed by contingency rules that determine when and where antagonists reduce plant disease severity.Here, we investigated whether pathogen competition influences pathogen antagonism using as a model system. In three independent field experiments, we asked whether competition for leaf mesophyll cells between a rust pathogen and a microscopic, eriophyid mite affects rust pathogen antagonism by fungal leaf endophytes. The rust pathogen has an annual, phenological disadvantage in competition with the mite because the rust pathogen must infect its secondary host in spring before infecting . We varied mite-rust competition by utilizing genotypes characterized by differential genetic resistance to the two organisms. We inoculated plants with endophytes and allowed mites and rust to infect plants naturally.Two contingency rules emerged from the three field experiments: (a) Pathogen antagonism by endophytes can be preempted by host genes for resistance that suppress pathogen development, and (b) pathogen antagonism by endophytes can secondarily be preempted by competitive exclusion of the rust by the mite. : Our results point to a defense hierarchy with resistance genes on top, followed by pathogen competition, and finally pathogen antagonism by endophytes. We expect these rules will help to explain the variation in pathogen antagonism that is currently attributed to context dependency.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5253 | DOI Listing |
Fungal Biol
February 2025
Federal University of Recôncavo da Bahia, Evolutionary Biology laboratory, Cruz das Almas, 44380-000, Bahia, Brazil. Electronic address:
During a survey of the genus Trichoderma in the Brazilian ecosystem Restinga, 22 strains related to Trichoderma spirale were found on the basis of identities of tef1, the molecular marker used to discriminate species of this genus. Trichoderma spirale was described in 1991 and since then four species related to it were described and later on added to the clade Spirale. Searches for tef1 sequences assigned to T.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFungal Biol
February 2025
Department of Microbiology and Virology, Faculty of Biology, University of Havana, San Lázaro & L, Vedado, Havana, Cuba. Electronic address:
The aim of this work is to evaluate different molecular strategies deployed by indigenous isolates of Trichoderma in their interaction with the phytopathogen Botrytis cinerea. In vitro antagonism assays, determination of volatile and diffusible compounds, and the relative expression of the prb1 gene, which codes for an extracellular protease, before and during the stage of direct contact between the two fungi, were carried out; the characterization of this protease was also performed. All 17 Trichoderma strains tested showed high levels of inhibition against B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBreast Cancer Res
January 2025
Department of Cancer Biology, Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine, Maywood, IL, 50153, USA.
Resistance to endocrine therapies remains a major clinical hurdle in breast cancer. Mutations to estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) arise after continued therapeutic pressure. Next generation selective estrogen receptor modulators and degraders/downregulators (SERMs and SERDs) show clinical efficacy, but responses are often non-durable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPest Manag Sci
January 2025
Department of Plant Pathology, The Islamia University of Bahawalpur, Bahawalpur, Pakistan.
Background: Bacillus species produce antimicrobial lipopeptides (LPs) and methyl jasmonate (MeJA) induces resistance in harvested fruits against postharvest pathogens. However, there is limited evidence of the combined efficacy of Bacillus LPs and MeJA to suppress postharvest diseases.
Results: This study presents the combined effect of Bacillus LPs and MeJA to suppress P.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg
November 2024
From the Department of Surgery and Sepsis and Critical Illness Research Center (J.A.M., L.S.K., E.E.P., C.G.A., K.B.K., L.E.B., P.A.E., A.M.M.), University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville; and The Gut Biome Lab, Department of Health, Nutrition, and Food Sciences (G.P., R.N.), Florida State University College of Education, Health, and Human Sciences, Tallahassee, Florida.
Background: Traumatic injury leads to gut dysbiosis with changes in microbiome diversity and conversion toward a "pathobiome" signature characterized by a selective overabundance of pathogenic bacteria. The use of non-selective beta antagonism in trauma patients has been established as a useful adjunct to reduce systemic inflammation. We sought to investigate whether beta-adrenergic blockade following trauma would prevent the conversion of microbiome to a "pathobiome" phenotype.
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