ADHESION OF UNGERMINATED CONIDIA OF COLLETOTRICHUM-GRAMINICOLA TO ARTIFICIAL HYDROPHOBIC SURFACES

Citation
Ew. Mercure et al., ADHESION OF UNGERMINATED CONIDIA OF COLLETOTRICHUM-GRAMINICOLA TO ARTIFICIAL HYDROPHOBIC SURFACES, Physiological and molecular plant pathology, 45(6), 1994, pp. 421-440
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
ISSN journal
08855765
Volume
45
Issue
6
Year of publication
1994
Pages
421 - 440
Database
ISI
SICI code
0885-5765(1994)45:6<421:AOUCOC>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Conidia of colletotrichum graminicola, the causal agent of corn anthra cnose, begin to adhere to hydrophobic surfaces immediately after conta ct with the surface and hours before the onset of germination. Conidia rarely adhered to glass, a hydrophilic surface. The maximum percentag e adhesion of ungerminated conidia was approx. 30-40 % on polystyrene Petri dishes and 20-25 % on dimethyldichlorosilane (DMS)-coated glass slides. The maximum adhesion on both surfaces was attained within 30 m in of the time of contact. Thus, conidia appear to require hydrophobic surfaces for adhesion. The extracellular mucilage that is produced in association with conidia was shown to not be involved in adhesion. Ad hesion was not influenced by conidium concentration but was influenced by conidium age. Exposure of conidia to different temperatures in adh esion assays delayed the ability of conidia to adhere. The respiration inhibitor, sodium azide and the transcription inhibitor, actinomycin D, had no effect on adhesion. In contrast, inhibitors of glycoprotein transport (brefeldin A) and protein synthesis (cycloheximide) reduced conidial adhesion by 30 and 50 %, respectively. Treatment of conidia w ith pronase E prevented adhesion completely. If conidia were pre-treat ed with pronase E, and then washed free of the enzyme, approx. 20 % of the conidial population recovered the ability to adhere. Conidia trea ted with Concanavalin A at a concentration of 1 mg ml(-1) also failed to adhere. This effect was partially reversed by the haptens glucose a nd mannose. Together, these results suggest that glycoprotein synthesi s is involved in the adhesion of ungerminated conidia.