Genetics, Vol. 161, 59-70, May 2002, Copyright © 2002

A Conditionally Dispensable Chromosome Controls Host-Specific Pathogenicity in the Fungal Plant Pathogen Alternaria alternata

Rieko Hattaa, Kaoru Itoa, Yoshitsugu Hosakib, Takayoshi Tanakaa, Aiko Tanakaa, Mikihiro Yamamotob, Kazuya Akimitsuc, and Takashi Tsugea
a Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Chikusa, Nagoya 464-8601,
b Faculty of Agriculture, Okayama University, Tsushimanaka, Okayama 700-8530
c Faculty of Agriculture, Kagawa University, Miki, Kagawa 761-0795, Japan

Corresponding author: Takashi Tsuge, Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Chikusa, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan., ttsuge{at}agr.nagoya-u.ac.jp (E-mail)

Communicating editor: J. J. LOROS

The filamentous fungus Alternaria alternata contains seven pathogenic variants (pathotypes), which produce host-specific toxins and cause diseases on different plants. Previously, the gene cluster involved in host-specific AK-toxin biosynthesis of the Japanese pear pathotype was isolated, and four genes, named AKT genes, were identified. The AKT homologs were also found in the strawberry and tangerine pathotypes, which produce AF-toxin and ACT-toxin, respectively. This result is consistent with the fact that the toxins of these pathotypes share a common 9,10-epoxy-8-hydroxy-9-methyl-decatrienoic acid structural moiety. In this study, three of the AKT homologs (AFT1-1, AFTR-1, and AFT3-1) were isolated on a single cosmid clone from strain NAF8 of the strawberry pathotype. In NAF8, all of the AKT homologs were present in multiple copies on a 1.05-Mb chromosome. Transformation-mediated targeting of AFT1-1 and AFT3-1 in NAF8 produced AF-toxin-minus, nonpathogenic mutants. All of the mutants lacked the 1.05-Mb chromosome encoding the AFT genes. This chromosome was not essential for saprophytic growth of this pathogen. Thus, we propose that a conditionally dispensable chromosome controls host-specific pathogenicity of this pathogen.





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