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Published May 22, 2018 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Conserved Responses in a War of Small Molecules between a Plant-Pathogenic Bacterium and Fungi

Abstract

Small-molecule signaling is one major mode of communication within the polymicrobial consortium of soil and rhizosphere. While microbial secondary metabolite (SM) production and responses of individual species have been studied extensively, little is known about potentially conserved roles of SM signals in multilayered symbiotic or antagonistic relationships. Here, we characterize the SM-mediated interaction between the plant-pathogenic bacterium Ralstonia solanacearum and the two plant-pathogenic fungi Fusarium fujikuroi and Botrytis cinerea. We show that cellular differentiation and SM biosynthesis in F. fujikuroi are induced by the bacterially produced lipopeptide ralsolamycin (synonym ralstonin A). In particular, fungal bikaverin production is induced and preferentially accumulates in fungal survival spores (chlamydospores) only when exposed to supernatants of ralsolamycin-producing strains of R. solanacearum. Although inactivation of bikaverin biosynthesis moderately increases chlamydospore invasion by R. solanacearum, we show that other metabolites such as beauvericin are also induced by ralsolamycin and contribute to suppression of R. solanacearum growth in vitro. Based on our findings that bikaverin antagonizes R. solanacearum and that ralsolamycin induces bikaverin biosynthesis in F. fujikuroi, we asked whether other bikaverin-producing fungi show similar responses to ralsolamycin. Examining a strain of B. cinerea that horizontally acquired the bikaverin gene cluster from Fusarium, we found that ralsolamycin induced bikaverin biosynthesis in this fungus. Our results suggest that conservation of microbial SM responses across distantly related fungi may arise from horizontal transfer of protective gene clusters that are activated by conserved regulatory cues, e.g., a bacterial lipopeptide, providing consistent fitness advantages in dynamic polymicrobial networks.

Additional Information

© 2018 Spraker et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Received 25 April 2018; Accepted 27 April 2018; Published 22 May 2018. This research was funded by an NSF graduate research fellowship under grant no. DGE-1256259 as well as an NSF postdoctoral research fellowship under award no. 1612169 to J.E.S. Other agencies contributing to this work included NIH CBI training grant T32GM008500 to J.A.B., NIH R01GM112739-01 to N.P.K. and F.C.S., in part USDA Hatch Formula Fund WIS01710 to N.P.K., and K12HD055892 from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) and the National Institutes of Health Office of Research on Women's Health (ORWH) and UIC startup funds to L.M.S. We thank Bettina Tudzynski for providing F. fujikuroi IMI58289 and Δbik1 strains, Hans-Ulrich Humpf for providing an authentic bikaverin standard, Antonio Di Pietro for providing F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici 4287, and Atul Jain and Terry Moore for assistance with recrystallization of DHB and CHCA.

Attached Files

Published - mBio-2018-Spraker-.pdf

Supplemental Material - inline-supplementary-material-1.tif

Supplemental Material - inline-supplementary-material-10.pdf

Supplemental Material - inline-supplementary-material-2.docx

Supplemental Material - inline-supplementary-material-3.tif

Supplemental Material - inline-supplementary-material-4.pdf

Supplemental Material - inline-supplementary-material-5.tif

Supplemental Material - inline-supplementary-material-6.pdf

Supplemental Material - inline-supplementary-material-7.pdf

Supplemental Material - inline-supplementary-material-8.tif

Supplemental Material - inline-supplementary-material-9.docx

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