Isolation of Natural Fungal Pathogens from Marchantia polymorpha Reveals Antagonism between Salicylic Acid and Jasmonate during Liverwort–Fungus Interactions

Hidenori Matsui(RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science), Hidekazu Iwakawa(Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research), Gang‐Su Hyon(RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science), Izumi Yotsui(RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science), Shinpei Katou(Shinshu University), Isabel Monte(Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas), Ryuichi Nishihama(Kyoto University), Rainer Franzen(Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research), Roberto Solano(Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas), Hirofumi Nakagami(RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science)
Plant and Cell Physiology
September 24, 2019
Cited by 63Open Access
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Abstract

The evolution of adaptive interactions with beneficial, neutral and detrimental microbes was one of the key features enabling plant terrestrialization. Extensive studies have revealed conserved and unique molecular mechanisms underlying plant-microbe interactions across different plant species; however, most insights gleaned to date have been limited to seed plants. The liverwort Marchantia polymorpha, a descendant of early diverging land plants, is gaining in popularity as an advantageous model system to understand land plant evolution. However, studying evolutionary molecular plant-microbe interactions in this model is hampered by the small number of pathogens known to infect M. polymorpha. Here, we describe four pathogenic fungal strains, Irpex lacteus Marchantia-infectious (MI)1, Phaeophlebiopsis peniophoroides MI2, Bjerkandera adusta MI3 and B. adusta MI4, isolated from diseased M. polymorpha. We demonstrate that salicylic acid (SA) treatment of M. polymorpha promotes infection of the I. lacteus MI1 that is likely to adopt a necrotrophic lifestyle, while this effect is suppressed by co-treatment with the bioactive jasmonate in M. polymorpha, dinor-cis-12-oxo-phytodienoic acid (dn-OPDA), suggesting that antagonistic interactions between SA and oxylipin pathways during plant-fungus interactions are ancient and were established already in liverworts.


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