Epiphytic ecology and nutrition for control of a wheat pathogen Completed Project uri icon

description

  • My research concerns a fungus, Zymoseptoria tritici, which attacks wheat plants, causing a disease known as Septoria tritici blotch (STB). STB costs the UK around £300 Million per year in lost wheat yields and in the cost of the fungicide used on the crops. Worse, the fungus is beginning to develop resistance to the fungicides that are available to treat it. This means that we need new methods to control the infection. To develop new ways to control Z. tritici, it is necessary to gain a full understanding of the ways in which the fungus interacts with the wheat plant, and how that interaction can be affected by environmental conditions. In previous work, I showed that some isolates of Z. tritici can grow on the leaf surface for around ten days before invading. The amount and duration of leaf surface growth varies between fungal isolates, and also when the same isolate infects different wheat varieties. If the particular wheat variety is resistant to a particular Z. tritici isolate, then that isolate will never invade the leaf. However, it appears that such 'avirulent' isolates can persist on the leaf surface instead, and even reproduce there, making new spores for dispersal to more susceptible wheat plants. Most plant pathogenic fungi, by contrast, can't obtain enough nutrients on the leaf surface to survive for more than 24 hours. I therefore want to determine, firstly, how important this leaf surface growth phase is for Z. tritici, and whether it is related to how effective the fungus is at causing disease. I also want to find out whether some isolates are more likely than others to spend a prolonged period of time on the leaf surface, and whether such differences in behaviour can be attributed to differences in the genomes of the fungal isolates. Secondly, I aim to determine what nutrients the fungus is using when it is on the leaf surface. For example, the fungus might be relying on internal lipid stores, or taking advantage of nutrients that are exuded from the leaf, or of agricultural inputs like fertilisers. Alternatively, it might be able to secrete enzymes which digest structural components of the leaf such as waxes, to obtain nutrients from those. The fungus might also be able to take advantage of the activities of other microbes on the leaf surface which secrete such enzymes, or which cause nutrients to leak from the leaf by damaging the leaf surface. Thirdly, therefore, I intend to sample wheat leaves in the field and use metagenomics to study which microbes are present on the leaf surface. I will then compare these microbial communities, taking note of how severely affected the wheat in each field was by Z. tritici, to look for correlations between the presence of particular microbes and the promotion of fungal infection. Having obtained these data about leaf surface growth in Z. tritici, I intend to use them to build a detailed picture of what the fungus needs to survive throughout this first period of infection, before it enters the leaf; or to persist and reproduce on the leaf surface if the wheat is resistant and it cannot enter. This will allow me to identify any vulnerabilities the fungus has that we might be able to exploit in order to control the disease. For instance, if leaf surface growth is boosted by the presence of fertiliser, then it may be possible to increase the usefulness of fungicides by inter-relating the timings of fertiliser and fungicide application. Alternatively, if the fungus relies on a particular metabolic pathway to obtain nutrients, then that pathway could be targeted for new forms of chemical or other control. Or, if the fungus gains a large advantage sharing the leaf surface with a particular bacterium, then controlling that bacterium, perhaps via bio-control with a competing bacterium that is not able to promote fungal growth, might indirectly control the fungus.

date/time interval

  • July 28, 2020 - July 27, 2024