Research Keyword: plant pathogenesis

Key sugar transporters drive development and pathogenicity in Aspergillus flavus

Researchers studied how Aspergillus flavus fungus transports sugars, which is crucial for its growth, producing the toxic aflatoxin that contaminates crops like corn and peanuts. By removing genes responsible for sugar transport, they found that the fungus became weak, couldn’t infect plants or animals effectively, and stopped producing the dangerous aflatoxin. This discovery could help develop new strategies to prevent aflatoxin contamination in food and reduce serious fungal infections in humans.

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Oxaloacetate anaplerosis differently contributes to pathogenicity in plant pathogenic fungi Fusarium graminearum and F. oxysporum

Two important crop-destroying fungi, Fusarium graminearum and F. oxysporum, rely differently on a metabolic enzyme called pyruvate carboxylase to cause disease. Researchers found that removing this enzyme completely eliminates the ability of F. oxysporum to infect tomato plants by blocking its capacity to penetrate roots and break down plant cell walls. However, the same enzyme deletion has minimal effect on F. graminearum’s ability to infect wheat, suggesting these fungi have evolved different metabolic strategies for attacking their hosts.

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Cell wall remodeling in a fungal pathogen is required for hyphal growth into microspaces

Researchers discovered how fungi squeeze through tiny spaces inside plant tissues to cause disease. They found that fungi need to soften and remodel their cell walls to reduce their width and fit through spaces that are much narrower than normal fungal filaments. This ability to change shape is critical for the fungus to invade and colonize plants, ultimately causing wilting diseases in crops like tomatoes.

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