Newswise — First reported in 2015, tar spot is an emerging disease on corn that has rapidly spread across the United States and Canada, causing tremendous yield loss estimated at $1.2 billion in 2021 alone. Tar spot gets its name from its iconic symptoms that resemble the splatter of “tar” on corn leaves, but these spots are in fact brown lesions formed by the fungal pathogen Phyllachora maydis. This destructive pathogen is challenging to research because it cannot survive outside its plant host; therefore, little information is currently known about the mechanisms that contribute to its disease cycle including spore formation, reproduction, and plant infection.

Researchers have consequently come to rely on genome sequencing to identify what genes are present and predict what roles they play during disease development. However, the current draft genome is largely incomplete, and although genes are present in the fungus, they may not be expressed during infection. To address this, a recent study led by Joshua MacCready and Emily Roggenkamp from Martin I. Chilvers’s lab at Michigan State University generated a high-quality genome for P. maydis and provided the first global gene expression analysis of tar spot disease infection. The study, published in the journal Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions, found that the fungus undergoes sexual reproduction early on in lesion formation, and this requires two individuals of different mating types.

This finding is significant because sexual reproduction allows the fungus more genetic flexibility to evolve, resulting in potentially more virulent or fungicide resistant isolates. Like many fungal pathogens, P. maydis relies on the secretion of proteins, called effectors, to manipulate and overcome plant immunity. This study identified over 100 effectors, many of which were found to be unique to this fungal pathogen and highly expressed during infection, suggesting that these proteins play a novel role during infection and warrant further investigation to determine their function.

The genome and gene expression analysis provides a valuable resource for other researchers studying tar spot on corn. Chilvers states, “This study lays the groundwork for future studies to examine effectors, pathogenesis, and the lifecycle of this pathogen.” Armed with an improved understanding about this fungus, these researchers aim to implement improved disease management tactics for this impactful pathogen.
 

For additional details, read Elucidating the Obligate Nature and Biology Capacity of an Invasive Fungal Corn Pathogen published in MPMI.
 

Follow the authors and institutes on X:

Martin I. Chilvers: @MartinChilvers1

Emily M. Roggenkamp: @EmRogge

Michigan State University Department of Plant, Soil and Microbial Sciences: @MSU_PSM

Michigan State University AgBioResearch: @MSUAgBio

Michigan State University College of Agriculture and Natural Resources: @CANRatMSU

Michigan State University Extension Field Crops: @MSUEFieldCrops 

Crop Protection Network: @CropNetwork
 

About Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (MPMI)

Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions® (MPMI) is a gold open access journal that publishes fundamental and advanced applied research on the genetics, genomics, molecular biology, biochemistry, and biophysics of pathological, symbiotic, and associative interactions of microbes, insects, nematodes, or parasitic plants with plants.
 

Follow us on X @MPMIjournal and visit https://apsjournals.apsnet.org/journal/mpmi to learn more.