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Infection by Magnaporthe oryzae chrysovirus 1 strain A triggers reduced virulence and pathogenic race conversion of its host fungus, <Emphasis Type="Italic">Magnaporthe oryzae</Emphasis>
Authors:Mitsuhiro Aihara  Syun-ichi Urayama  Minh Tuong Le  Yu Katoh  Tomoya Higashiura  Toshiyuki Fukuhara  Tsutomu Arie  Tohru Teraoka  Ken Komatsu  Hiromitsu Moriyama
Institution:1.Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Graduate School of Agriculture,Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology,Fuchu,Japan;2.Laboratory of Plant Pathology, Graduate School of Agriculture,Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology,Fuchu,Japan;3.Department of Plant Protection, College of Agriculture and Applied Biology,Can Tho University,Can Tho City,Vietnam
Abstract:Magnaporthe oryzae chrysovirus 1 strain A (MoCV1-A) is associated with an impaired growth phenotype of its host fungus, Magnaporthe oryzae. In this report, we assayed the virulence and pathogenicity of MoCV1-A-infected and MoCV1-A-free M. oryzae on rice plants. MoCV1-A infection did not affect virulence-associated fungal traits, such as conidial germination and appressorium formation. However, after punch inoculation of leaves on rice plants, MoCV1-A-infected strain formed smaller lesions than the MoCV1-A-free strain did on all rice varieties tested, showing that MoCV1-A infection resulted in reduced virulence of host fungi in rice plants. In contrast, after spray inoculation of rice seedlings, in some cases, MoCV1-A-infected and MoCV1-A-free strains caused different lesion types (resistance to susceptible, or vice versa) on individual international differential rice varieties. However, we did not find any gain/loss of the fungal avirulence genes by PCR, suggesting that MoCV1-A infection can convert the pathogenicity of the host M. oryzae from avirulence to virulence, or from virulence to avirulence, depending on the rice variety. We also confirmed the correlation of these race conversion events and invasive hyphae growth of the fungi in a leaf sheath inoculation assay. These data suggested that MoCV1-A infection generally confers hypovirulence to the fungal host and could be a driving force to generate physiological diversity, including pathogenic races.
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