Abstract:
Exserohilum turcicum is the hemibiotrophic causal agent of Northern leaf blight of maize and sorghum. Despite the global importance of this yield-limiting pathogen, knowledge regarding genes contributing to disease development and race-specificity is limited. Therefore, this study aimed to identify genes involved in host colonization during biotrophic and necrotrophic phases of infection, as well as race-specific differences in gene expression. RNAseq of maize seedlings inoculated with a race 13N or 23N E. turcicum isolate was conducted to identify genes contributing to fungal pathogenicity, and expression was validated for four effector candidates. A population genetic study was undertaken of isolates from maize and sorghum to select isolates for sequencing of three putative effectors. Fungal biomass positively correlated with the percentages of E. turcicum reads mapped and indicated a lifestyle switch from biotrophy to necrotrophy between 7 and 13 dpi. Transcriptome sequencing enabled identification of cell wall degrading enzymes, peptidase-encoding genes, secondary metabolite biosynthesis genes and candidate effectors likely contributing to the pathogenicity of E. turcicum. Profiling of Ecp6 and candidate effector SIX13-like revealed increased expression at 5 and 7 dpi compared to 2 and 13 dpi. Evidence of host specificity was obtained from microsatellite haplotypes and sequencing of SIX13-like. Identification of candidate effector SIX13-like is consistent with the colonization of E. turcicum through the xylem of susceptible hosts and possibly indicates specificity of E. turcicum to either maize or sorghum. This study identified E. turcicum genes putatively involved in pathogenicity and describes a hypothetical model of the E. turcicum – maize interaction.