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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 2002, p. 4044-4060, Vol. 68, No. 8
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.8.4044-4060.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Recherche en Sciences de la Vie et de la Santé, Université Laval, Sainte-Foy, Québec, Canada G1K 7P4
Received 7 February 2002/ Accepted 18 May 2002
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The actual mechanisms underlying Fusarium-mediated induced protection in suppressive soils are not completely understood, although a number of possibilities have been raised, including microbial competition for nutrients (20), competition for infection sites and root colonization (26), and, more recently, plant-induced resistance through the rapid stimulation of a general cascade of nonspecific defense responses, including structural barriers (12) and pathogenesis-related proteins such as chitinases and ß-1,3-glucanases (23). By using root-inducing transferred-DNA-transformed pea roots, Benhamou and Garand (12) recently demonstrated that pea root inoculation with nonpathogenic Fusarium strain Fo47 triggered a set of plant defense reactions that resulted in the elaboration of permeability barriers and in the creation of a fungitoxic environment that protected the roots by barricading the fungus in the outermost root tissues.
An interaction that has been the focus of much interest as a model pathosystem in both basic and applied research is that between cucumber and Pythium ultimum Trow (35). Over the last few years, a number of approaches, including chemical (9, 18), biological (25), and microbial (10, 14, 31, 45) treatments, have been proposed for the control of Pythium-incited diseases in cucumber. However, the value of these options in agriculture and horticulture has yet to be realized, mainly because serious limitations, such as phytotoxicity and variability, have delayed any transfer of technology from the laboratory to the field. Since biofungicides are usually composed of living organisms, their efficacy may vary under a wide range of environmental, cultural, and biotic conditions. Because of such difficulties, integrated pest management strategies, involving more than one biocontrol product or agent, offer bright opportunities for success, provided that the mode of action of each component is understood. An approach that is gaining increasing interest in the context of integrated biological control of soilborne pathogens concerns the potential value of nonpathogenic fungal strains, such as strain Fo47, in association with bacterial and fungal antagonists (23, 24).
As a complement to previous investigations of the potential use of Fo47 for control of tomato crown and root rot (12), the present study was undertaken to determine whether Fo47 is capable of protecting cucumber plants from P. ultimum infection. Up to now, suppressiveness associated with Fusarium oxysporum strain Fo47 was thought to be specifically effective, operating on diseases incited by formae speciales of pathogenic F. oxysporum (2) but not, apparently, against diseases caused by other plant pathogens (38). In order to determine whether Fo47, which is known to protect tomato plants against F. oxysporum attack through the synergistic action of several mechanisms (1), is also effective in controlling infection by P. ultimum, the effect of this nonpathogenic F. oxysporum strain on P. ultimum in vitro and in vivo on greenhouse-grown cucumber plants was examined. We present the first conclusive evidence that cucumber plants previously inoculated with nonpathogenic Fusarium strain Fo47 have increased resistance to Pythium attack. This protection is mainly associated with a strong antagonistic activity in the rhizosphere and in planta, as well as with the induction of structural and biochemical barriers that adversely affect pathogen growth and development.
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Dual-culture tests.
The effect of strain Fo47 on the growth, morphology, and ultrastructure of P. ultimum was assayed in dual-culture tests by using a procedure previously described by Chérif and Benhamou (17). Briefly, 5-mm mycelial disks collected from the edges of actively growing colonies of Fo47 and P. ultimum were placed 3 cm apart on the surface of PDA medium and allowed to grow at 25°C under continuous light. As the first apparent contact between the antagonist and the pathogen occurred by 2 days after inoculation, mycelial samples from the interaction region were collected at 2, 3, and 4 days and processed for electron microscopy. The experiment was repeated twice with three petri dishes per sampling time.
Plant treatment with F. oxysporum strain Fo47 and fungal inoculation with P. ultimum.
Seeds of cucumber, (Cucumis sativus L., cv. Corona; De Ruiter Seeds Inc.) were surface sterilized by immersion in 1% aqueous sodium hypochlorite for 60 min and thoroughly rinsed in sterile distilled water prior to being allowed to germinate in petri dishes containing sterile, moist cotton. Plates were incubated at 25°C in the dark for 48 h. Germinated seeds were carefully removed from the cotton and sown in a mixture of peat-perlite-vermiculite (1:1:1) at a density of four seedlings per 6-cm pot. Plants were fertilized every other day with a nutrient solution containing (in milliequivalents) NO3 (12.0), PO4 (1.0), K (1.7), Mg (1.5), Ca (2.8), and S (0.5) and (in microequivalents) Fe (70.0), Mn (18.0), Zn (7.7), Cu (1.5), B (27.5), and Mo (0.5). The pH of the solution was adjusted to 6.2, and the electrical conductivity was adjusted to 2.4 mS. Seedlings were grown on a greenhouse bench at 24 to 26°C with 16 h of light supplemented by high-pressure sodium lamps (100 microeinsteins · m-2 · s-1).
Three-week old cucumber seedlings were inoculated with a microconidial suspension of Fo47 (105 conidia/g of dry substrate) carefully introduced into the soil (as close as possible to the root system) with a sterile syringe. Control plants were treated similarly but with sterile deionized water only. Four days later, plants were challenge inoculated by introducing two plugs (5-mm diameter) of actively growing mycelium of P. ultimum as close as possible to the root system. Controls were treated with fungus-free PDA disks The experimental design included the following treatments: (i) no Fo47 or P. ultimum (healthy controls), (ii) Fo47 but no P. ultimum, (iii) P. ultimum but no Fo47, and (iv) Fo47 and P. ultimum. Twenty plants were used for each treatment (Fo47 alone, P. ultimum alone, and a combination Fo47 and P. ultimum), and the experiment was repeated twice. The roots were pulled out of the substrate and examined daily for fungal infection (visible necrotic lesions). For electron microscope investigations, samples from the main roots were collected 3 to 5 days after pathogen inoculation and either deposited on PDA in sterile petri dishes or processed for electron microscopy.
Tissue processing for light and transmission electron microscopy.
Mycelial samples from dual-culture tests, as well as root samples from treated and untreated cucumber plants, were processed for electron microscope studies. Root samples (2 mm3) were carefully excised from colonized cucumber roots at sites of potential fungal penetration (16). They were pre-embedded in 2% aqueous Bacto Agar in order to preserve the rhizosphere microbial populations. Mycelial and root samples were then immersed in a mixture of 3% (vol/vol) glutaraldehyde and 3% (wt/vol) paraformaldehyde in 0.2 M sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 7.2, for 2 h at room temperature prior to being postfixed with 1% (wt/vol) osmium tetroxide in the same buffer for 1 h at 4°C and dehydrated in a graded ethanol series prior to being embedded in Epon 812 (J. B. E. M. Chemical Co., Pointe-Claire, Quebec, Canada). Thin (0.7-µm) sections cut from the Epon-embedded material with glass knives were mounted on glass slides and stained with 1% aqueous toluidine blue prior to examination with a Zeiss Axioskop microscope (Carl Zeiss Canada, Don Mills, Ontario, Canada). Ultrathin (0.1-µm) sections were collected on Formvar-coated nickel grids and either contrasted with uranyl acetate and lead citrate for direct examination with a JEOL 1200 EX electron microscope (JEOL, Tokyo, Japan) at 80 kV or processed for cytochemical labeling. An average of five samples from three different plants per sampling time were investigated. For each sample, 10 to 15 ultrathin sections were examined under the electron microscope.
Preparation of the gold-complexed probes and cytochemical labeling.
Colloidal gold particles (BDH Chemicals, Montreal, Quebec, Canada) averaging 12 nm in diameter were prepared as described by Frens (27) by using sodium citrate as a reducing agent.
The ß-1,4-exoglucanase-gold complex (ß-1,4-D-glucan cellobiohydrolase; EC 3.2.1.21) used for localization of cellulosic ß-1,4-glucans was prepared as described by Benhamou et al. (13). N-Acetylglucosamine residues (chitin) were localized by a two-step procedure (7) using wheat germ agglutinin (WGA; Sigma Chemical Co., St Louis, Mo.) as a first-step reagent and gold-complexed ovomucoid (Sigma Chemical Co.) as a second-step reagent. The exoglucanase was complexed to gold at pH 9.0, and the ovomucoid was complexed to gold at pH 5.4.
Labeling with gold-complexed exoglucanase was performed by incubating first the ultrathin root sections for 5 to 10 min on a drop of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), pH 6.0, containing 0.02% (wt/vol) polyethylene glycol 20000 at pH 6.0. Sections were then transferred to a drop of the enzyme-gold complex for 30 min at room temperature in a moist chamber.
For the labeling of N-acetylglucosamine residues, sections were first floated on a drop of PBS, pH 7.4, for 5 min and then transferred to a drop of WGA (12 µg/ml in PBS, pH 7.4) and incubated for 60 min at room temperature in a moist chamber. After washing with PBS, pH 7.4, sections were incubated on a drop of the ovomucoid-gold complex (1:30 in PBS-polyethylene glycol, pH 6.0) for 30 min at room temperature.
After careful washing with PBS, pH 7.2, and rinsing with distilled water, all sections were contrasted with uranyl acetate and lead citrate and observed with a JEOL 1200 EX transmission electron microscope.
Labeling specificity was assessed by incubating the sections with (i) gold-complexed exoglucanase to which were previously added ß-1,4-glucans from barley (1 mg/ml in PBS); (ii) WGA to which was previously added an excess of N,N',N'-triacetylchitotriose (1 mg/ml in PBS); (iii) WGA, followed by unlabeled ovomucoid and finally by ovomucoid-gold complex; and (iv) a stabilized or an unstabilized gold suspension.
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FIG. 1. In vitro interactions between F. oxysporum strain Fo47 and P. ultimum 2 days after inoculation of the fungi on PDA medium. (A) P. ultimum (P) grown in single culture. (B) P. ultimum (P) grown in the presence of Fo47 (F). Growth of the pathogen is delayed, and changes in hyphal density at the edge of the colony are evident (arrow).
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FIG. 2. Transmission electron micrographs of mycelial samples collected 2 days after inoculation in the region of interaction between Fo47 and P. ultimum. (A) Cell of P. ultimum (P) grown in single culture. Upon labeling with gold-complexed exoglucanase, regular deposition of gold particles occurs over the cell wall whereas the cytoplasm and the organelles, such as mitochondria (M), are unlabeled. (B) In dual-culture tests, hyphae of P. ultimum (P) are severely altered at a time when the P. ultimum cell wall (PCW) is regularly labeled by the exoglucanase-gold complex. Cells of Fo47 (F) are not specifically labeled. (C) Labeling with the WGA-ovomucoid-gold complex results in labeling of Fo47 cell walls (FCW). Altered Pythium (P) cells are unlabeled. S, septum. Bars, 0.5 µm.
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FIG. 3. Transmission electron micrographs of mycelial samples collected 3 to 4 days after inoculation in the region of interaction between Fo47 and P. ultimum. (A and B). Local splitting of Pythium (P) cell wall (PCW) layers, accompanied by the deposition of vesicular material between the split layers (arrows), is evident. The split wall layers are labeled with the exoglucanase-gold complex (A) but not with the WGA-ovomucoid-gold complex (B). F, F. oxysporum strain Fo47. Bars, 0.5 µm.
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FIG. 4. Effect of F. oxysporum strain Fo47 on incidence of disease caused by P. ultimum. (A) In the absence of Fo47 preinoculation, cucumber seedlings infected with P. ultimum exhibit typical root symptoms, as well as leaf wilting. (B) Plants treated with Fo47 prior to Pythium inoculation have a more vigorous root system, on which only a few tiny lesions (arrow) are detectable.
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TABLE 1. Effect of nonpathogenic F. oxysporum strain Fo47 on the number of root lesions induced by P. ultimum Trow
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Histological observation of effect of F. oxysporum strain Fo47 on the rate and extent of root cell colonization by P. ultimum.
In cucumber plants that were not preinoculated with Fo47 prior to infection with P. ultimum, the root tissues were massively invaded as early as 3 days after fungal inoculation. Pythium hyphae propagated through much of the epidermis, the cortex, the endodermis, and the paratracheal parenchyma of cells (Fig. 5A; Table 2) by inter- and intracellular modes of growth (Fig. 5B). Host cell penetration by local rupture of the cell wall was frequently recorded (Fig. 5B, arrow). Such a massive fungal colonization, which apparently prevented the elaboration of host defense reactions, coincided with cytological disorders such as cell wall alterations as estimated by the noticeable decrease in wall staining intensity.
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FIG. 5. Cross sections of pea roots stained with toluidine blue. (A and B) Roots inoculated with P. ultimum (controls). Hyphae of P. ultimum (P) propagate through much of the root tissues, including the epidermis (E) and the cortex (Co) (panel A). Fungal growth occurs in intercellular spaces (IS), as well as intracellularly (panel B). Direct host cell wall penetration is visible (panel B, arrow). Bars: A, 25 µm; B, 10 µm. (C through G) Roots inoculated with F. oxysporum strain Fo47. The fungus (F) develops actively at the root surface and penetrates the epidermis (E) and the outer cortex (Co) (panel C). Colonization of the outermost root tissues correlates with marked thickening of the host cell walls (panel D), formation of wall appositions (panel E), deposition of a fibrillar matrix in which fungal cells (F) are trapped (panel F, arrow), and occlusion of intercellular spaces with amorphous material in which fungal cells are also captured (panel G, arrow). Bars: C, 25 µm; D through G, 10 µm.
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TABLE 2. Effect of nonpathogenic F. oxysporum strain Fo47 on the rate and extent of P. ultimum colonization of cucumber root tissues 4 days after inoculation
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In Fo47-inoculated cucumber roots that were challenged with P. ultimum, the pattern of colonization by the pathogen differed markedly from that observed in control roots grown in the absence of Fo47 (Fig. 6). Both fungi, easily recognizable by their different electron density and diameter, were restricted to the outermost root cell layers, including the epidermis and the outer cortex (Fig. 6A; Table 2). Growth of the pathogen in planta was associated with cytological changes characterized mainly by elaboration of wall appositions in the regions proximal to potential fungal penetration (Fig. 6B), deposition of densely stained material along the host cell walls and the pathogen cell surface (Fig. 6C, arrowhead), and filling of most intercellular spaces with matrices varying in texture and density (Fig. 6D, arrows). A large percentage (70%) of Pythium hyphae was reduced to empty shells in which the only recognizable structure was the cell wall (Fig. 6C). Close examination of the colonized areas suggested that hyphae of Fo47 could penetrate and grow within cells of the pathogen, as indicated by the occurrence of empty fungal shells containing some dense inclusions resembling Fusarium cells (Fig. 6C, arrows). Although such light microscope observations gave some indications about the mechanisms by which Fo47 could protect cucumber plants against infection by P. ultimum, more detailed ultrastructural investigations were needed to accurately evaluate the antagonistic process in planta and to provide additional information about the functional significance of the host defense reactions in restricting pathogen growth and development.
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FIG. 6. Effect of F. oxysporum strain Fo47 on the rate and extent of root cell colonization by P. ultimum. Staining was done with toluidine blue. (A through D) Both fungi, easily recognizable by their different electron densities and diameters, are restricted to the outermost root cell layers, including the epidermis (E) (panel A). Growth of P. ultimum (P) in planta is associated with formation of wall appositions (WA) at sites of potential fungal penetration (panel B), deposition of densely stained material along the host cell walls and the pathogen cell surface (panel C, arrowhead), and filling of intercellular spaces with fibrillar matrices (panel D, arrows). Features of potential mycoparasitism exerted by Fo47 (F) are visible (panel C, arrows). Bars: A, 25 µm; B to D, 10 µm.
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FIG. 7. Transmission electron micrographs of cross sections of cucumber roots inoculated with either P. ultimum alone (A) or F. oxysporum strain Fo47 (B through E). (A) Pythium hyphae (P) develop abundantly in all root tissues, causing some host cell wall (HCW) alterations. (B through E) Attempts of Fo47 hyphae to penetrate the epidermis are often halted by the formation of hemispheric wall appositions (WA) at sites of potential penetration (B and C). Elongated and stratified wall appositions are also seen in areas proximal to attempted fungal penetration (D, arrows). Electron-dense deposits (E, arrows) surround an Fo47 cell (F), which is distorted. Bars: A through C, 2 µm; D, 0.5 µm; E, 1 µm.
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TABLE 3. Effect of nonpathogenic F. oxysporum strain Fo47 on the number and size of wall appositions formed at sites of P. ultimum entry in cucumber root tissues 4 days after inoculation
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FIG. 8. Transmission electron micrographs of cross sections of cucumber roots inoculated with F. oxysporum strain Fo47. (A) Osmiophilic material lining the primary walls of invaded intercellular spaces (arrow) extends toward the inside to coat Fo47 hyphae (F). The host cell wall (HCW) is labeled with gold-complexed exoglucanase. Bar, 0.5 µm. (B) Occlusion of an intercellular space (IS) with a fibrillar matrix (FM) in which fungal cells (F) are trapped. WA, wall apposition. Bar, 1 µm.
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FIG. 9. Cytological and cytochemical observations of the effect of F. oxysporum strain Fo47 on the rate and extent of root cell colonization by P. ultimum. (A through C) Colonization of the root surface by Fo47 and P. ultimum. Fusarium cells (F) develop abundantly at the root surface and interact with the pathogen either through intimate contact (A, arrows) or through mycoparasitism (B and C). The wall of penetrated Pythium hyphae is labeled with gold-complexed exoglucanase (C, arrow). (D and E) Colonization of intercellular spaces (IS) by Pythium hyphae (P) is associated with host defense reactions, including formation of wall appositions (WA) and deposition of osmiophilic material that forms a coating band around invading fungal cells (E, arrow). Bars: A, 2 µm; B, D, and E, 1 µm; C, 0.5 µm.
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Since Fo47 hyphae could also colonize the epidermis and the outer cortex, it was of interest to determine whether or not the antagonistic activity observed at the root cell surface also occurred in the root tissues. Examination of a large number of sections from different roots provided evidence that Fo47 hyphae could physically interact with the pathogen, causing cytological damage similar to that observed in vitro and in the rhizosphere (Fig. 10A). Such altered Pythium cells were usually devoid of cytoplasm and organelles, and cell wall labeling with the gold-complexed exoglucanase was the only indication of a previously living entity. Close examination of the labeling pattern, however, revealed that gold particles were irregularly distributed, especially in areas adjacent to Fo47 cells (Fig. 10A, arrows).
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FIG. 10. Cytological and cytochemical observations of effect of F. oxysporum strain Fo47 on the rate and extent of root cell colonization by P. ultimum. (A) Interactions between Fo47 (F) and P. ultimum (P) causing cytological damage similar to that observed at the root surface are evident in some intercellular spaces (IS). Incubation of sections with gold-complexed exoglucanase results in regular labeling of Pythium cell walls (PCW), except in areas adjacent to the F047 cell wall (arrows). (B) Feature of mycoparasitism observed in an intercellular space (IS). The penetrated Pythium cell wall (PCW) is labeled with gold-complexed exoglucanase. Labeling is absent over the wall of the invading Fusarium cell (F), in which a septum (S) and Woronin bodies (WB) are visible. Bars, 0.5 µm.
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Pathogen cell alteration did not occur only upon contact with Fo47. Indeed, marked changes in both the morphology and ultrastructure of Pythium hyphae were frequently observed at a distance from Fo47 hyphae (Fig. 11A). Such changes usually coincided with the deposition of an unusual fibrillar network in some intercellular spaces. By 5 days after pathogen inoculation, most Pythium hyphae were so morphologically and structurally altered that labeling of cellulose with gold-complexed exoglucanase was the only way to detect their presence (Fig. 11B and C).
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FIG. 11. Cytological and cytochemical observations of effect of F. oxysporum strain Fo47 on the rate and extent of root cell colonization by P. ultimum. (A) Pythium hyphae (P) are altered even at a distance from Fusarium cells (F). (B and C) By 5 days after pathogen inoculation, Pythium hyphae (P) are morphologically and structurally altered. Labeling of cellulose with gold-complexed exoglucanase confirms their presence. F, Fo47 hypha; HCW, host cell wall. Bars: B, 1 µm; A and C, 0.5 µm.
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Results of the present study confirm and further document the ability of F. oxysporum strain Fo47 to stimulate resistance genes leading to the production and accumulation of plant defense molecules (12). Most striking and interesting was the observation that preinoculation of strain Fo47 conferred increased resistance of cucumber plants to infection by P. ultimum. This stands in contrast to the general conceptual framework in which strain Fo47 exhibits biocontrol capabilities against a very narrow spectrum of root diseases, mainly those caused by pathogenic F. oxysporum strains (4, 38). Since nonpathogenic Fusarium spp. can occupy overlapping ecological niches and compete with phytopathogenic microorganisms for available nutrients (i.e., carbon and iron) (26, 32), in addition to inducing systemic resistance (23), one would expect these fungi to be highly versatile and exhibit little specificity as to the targets they control. Our results are thus of particular relevance since they highlight, for the first time, the potential of this rhizosphere-competent fungus as a promising biocontrol agent of Pythium-incited diseases.
Another novel finding of the present study concerns the antagonistic activity mediated by Fo47 to control pathogen density. The main mechanisms by which fungal antagonists may exert activity against pathogens have long been attributed to direct effects such as mycoparasitism, antibiosis, competition for nutrients and space, and indirect effects such as plant-induced resistance. These mechanisms may operate either alone or synergistically (2). Recent investigations of the involvement of microbial antagonism in the suppression of fusarium wilts have disclosed that reduction of pathogenic F. oxysporum populations in suppressive soils was greatly enhanced when Fo47 was associated with fluorescent Pseudomonas spp. (24, 32). Evidence was provided that the antagonistic process relies mainly on iron competition mediated by siderophores such as the pseudobactin produced by P. putida (32) and on competition for carbon and for infection sites at the root surface (37). That antibiosis and/or mycoparasitism could be involved in the antagonistic process has been a poorly explored research hypothesis. With the exception of the study by Anjaiah et al. (6), who reported that toxic metabolites produced by fluorescent Pseudomonas spp. (i.e., phenazines) could directly affect pathogen viability in soils suppressive to fusarium wilts, the possibility that Fo47 itself may exert direct antimicrobial activity has been ignored, although expectations with regard to the ability of a specific microorganism to function as a successful biocontrol agent are partly conditioned by deep knowledge of its mechanisms of action (29). Confrontation experiments between Fo47 and P. ultimum in vitro revealed that a substantial reduction of P. ultimum growth was achieved by Fo47. At the ultrastructural level, the observation that the viability of Pythium hyphae was disrupted in the absence of intimate contact with Fo47 cells was taken as an indication that antimicrobial substances were produced by Fo47. Similar cellular alterations (i.e., plasmalemma retraction and disruption, cytoplasm aggregation and/or dissolution, and organelle disintegration) have often been reported to occur upon exposure of fungal pathogens to antibiotics or hydrolytic enzymes produced by antagonistic organisms (10, 11, 33). In the interaction under study, the regular pattern of cellulose distribution over the cell walls of highly altered P. ultimum hyphae excludes the option that cell wall-degrading enzymes may contribute to the observed cell disturbances. More realistic is the possibility that Fo47 produced antibiotics that diffused in the medium prior to reaching their potential receptors at the plasma membrane of Pythium cells. Cell wall splitting and deposition of amorphous material between the split wall layers were other prominent facets of the interaction between Fo47 and P. ultimum. Although the mechanisms underlying such a process are unknown, one may suggest that such changes in cell wall structure reflect a defense strategy elaborated by Pythium hyphae to protect themselves from the action of toxic metabolites secreted by Fo47.
Taken together, our results open the way to a better understanding of the role played by antibiosis in Fo47-mediated antagonism against P. ultimum. These results, obtained from in vitro bioassays, must, however, be viewed with caution since physiological and cellular events observed in culture media do not necessarily indicate that similar phenomena occur in the presence of the host plant. Data corroborating this concept come from the finding that mycoparasitism, which was never observed in dual-culture tests, was a major determinant of the biocontrol activity exerted by Fo47 in planta. Observations of the root surface showed that Fo47 cells established close contact with hyphae of P. ultimum, leading to a series of cellular alterations similar, in most respects, to those observed in dual-culture tests. Most striking and interesting was the finding that mycoparasitism, as evidenced by the frequent occurrence of Fo47 hyphae within nearly empty cells of the pathogen, occurred not only at the root surface but also within the invaded root tissues. Successful penetration and colonization of Pythium hyphae by Fo47 cells imply that cellulolytic enzymes were produced. Data favoring the concept of increased production of cellulases include the labeling pattern of cellulose, which clearly showed that the level of integrity of this wall-bound compound was greatly affected in penetrated Pythium hyphae. The production of extracellular lytic enzymes by Fo47 is not a well-documented phenomenon, although Benhamou and Garand (12) recently concluded that the ability of Fo47 to colonize the outer root tissues is likely associated with the production of cell wall-hydrolytic enzymes such as pectinases and cellulases. The possibility that Fo47 may use the cellulases produced to breach the plant cell wall as part of its biocontrol activity against P. ultimum appears to be a realistic option that would explain why features of mycoparasitism were not observed in dual cultures. According to our observations, it seems reasonable to speculate that cellulase production by Fo47 is a phenomenon induced upon perception of signals produced by the plant. In a number of biological systems, molecular signaling has been shown to play a crucial role in the process of host recognition, leading to a series of events resulting in penetration and invasion of the host cells (8, 22). Because mycoparasitism always occurred at a time when cells of the pathogen were depleted of their protoplasm, one may speculate that cellulolytic enzymes are not the only critical traits involved in the antagonistic process. Although it is clear that such enzymes play a key role in breaching the pathogen cell walls, it seems likely that cellulase activity is preceded by or coincides with the action of toxic compounds, as recently shown by Di Pietro et al. (21) and Schirmböck et al. (41), in the biocontrol process mediated by fungal antagonists. All of these results suggest that a specific enzyme-antibiotic balance may be required for optimal antagonistic activity in the rhizosphere. Within this framework, the apparent contradictions between the present results and the earlier reports should be reconsidered on the basis that the ability of Fo47 to produce hydrolytic enzymes requires an inducing signal originating from the plant. Since plants probably do not generate chitinase-inducing signals, it is unlikely that mycoparasitism against pathogenic F. oxysporum spp., which are known to contain chitin as a major cell wall component, occurs in the rhizosphere. On the contrary, the production of cellulases, used by Fo47 for colonizing root tissues, may lead to an important reduction of oomycete population densities through mycoparasitism. By providing food sources, such a process may, in turn, contribute to an increase in Fo47 biomass, thus conferring obvious advantages in terms of competition for space and nutrients.
Even though direct microbial interactions appear to be a major determinant in restricting Pythium invasion of cucumber root tissues, induction of host defense reactions is another facet of the mechanisms involved in the protection mediated by Fo47. In line with previous reports (12, 37, 40), our ultrastructural work confirmed the rhizosphere competence of Fo47 and the subsequent penetration of the outer root tissues. The consequences of root colonization by Fo47 were striking in terms of host physiological changes, as evidenced by the reinforcement of cell walls beyond the infection sites and the deposition of fibrillar and/or amorphous matrices in the invaded areas. Similar barriers, likely laid down to prevent extensive fungal spreading and potential fungal pathogenesis, have been described in cucumber and tomato roots inoculated with other mycoparasites such as T. harzianum (45) and Pythium oligandrum (15). Such a rapid induction of plant defense reactions may represent a process by which nonpathogenic microorganisms coexist within root tissues without causing the extensive cell damage frequently observed in compatible host-pathogen interactions. Although a large number of wall appositions were formed at sites of potential entry, Fo47 hyphae displayed the ability to penetrate the epidermis and the outer root cortex, indicating its ability to produce the required cell wall-degrading enzymes.
Positive correlations between Fo47 treatment and induced resistance to infection by P. ultimum in cucumber were confirmed by at least three main observations: (i) reduction of pathogen viability, (ii) elaboration of newly formed barriers, and (iii) occlusion of intercellular spaces. Restriction of pathogen growth to the outer root tissues coincided with a substantial decrease in pathogen viability, suggesting the creation of a fungitoxic environment in the invaded areas. The mechanisms involved in pathogen cell alteration in planta have not been clearly defined, although it is reasonable to postulate that direct inhibitory effects, mediated by the synergistic action of phenolic compounds produced by the plant and antifungal metabolites produced by Fo47, are responsible for the observed Pythium cell damage. Strengthening of the host cell walls by either incrustation of newly formed compounds or deposition of numerous heterogeneous wall appositions was a prominent facet of the plant response to Pythium infection. This phenomenon, which was not detected in Fo47-free plants, where the pathogen proliferated in all root tissues within a few days, correlates well with the concept that barricading the pathogen through physical exclusion to limit extensive host tissue invasion is a genetically programmed resistance response that involves the de novo synthesis of various structural compounds, including phenolics and lignin (36). Filling of most intercellular spaces with a dense material likely enriched in phenolics frequently coincided with marked pathogen cell alterations. Since intercellular spaces are known to be preferential sites for pathogen ingress, it is thus not surprising that one of the earliest host defense reactions consists of accumulation of fungitoxic substances at these strategic areas (14, 15).
In contrast to the view summarized by Djuiff et al. (23, 24) regarding the secondary importance of plant-induced resistance in the fusarium wilt suppression achieved by Fo47, our cytological observations clearly demonstrate that Fo47-mediated induced resistance is a key complementary mechanism in the protection of cucumber against infection by P. ultimum. The present study brings novel insights into the multifaceted mechanisms by which Fo47 operates to trigger plant protection and highlights the potential of cytological approaches in evaluating the functional activity of plant and microbial cells during specific biological processes. Although such results are difficult to generalize since they may be linked to the particular interaction under study, our observations demonstrate for the first time that: (i) Fo47 has the ability to control more root pathogens than previously thought, (ii) Fo47 exerts a direct inhibitory effect on P. ultimum, and (iii) Fo47 is a strong inducer of plant defense reactions, mainly structural barriers laid down to protect the inner root tissues from massive invasion. Today, an improved protection program implies the availability of highly efficient biofungicides. Because of its remarkable biological properties, nonpathogenic F. oxysporum strain Fo47 offers very good prospects for integrated management of root disease in greenhouse crops.
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