Elsevier

Fungal Genetics and Biology

Volume 106, September 2017, Pages 26-41
Fungal Genetics and Biology

Review
How light affects the life of Botrytis

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fgb.2017.06.002Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Botrytis cinerea is an aggressive plant pathogen causing gray mold diseases.

  • Near-UV, blue, green, red and far-red light affect its growth characteristics.

  • Eleven (plus X?) potential photoreceptors cover the entire light spectrum.

  • A sophisticated signaling machinery allows for processing the light signals.

  • Light regulates morphogenesis, tropism, entrainment and stress responses.

Abstract

Fungi, like other organisms, actively sense the environmental light conditions in order to drive adaptive responses, including protective mechanisms against the light-associated stresses, and to regulate development. Ecological niches are characterized by different light regimes, for instance light is absent underground, and light spectra from the sunlight are changed underwater or under the canopy of foliage due to the absorption of distinct wavelengths by bacterial, algal and plant pigments. Considering the fact that fungi have evolved to adapt to their habitats, the complexities of their ‘visual’ systems may vary significantly. Fungi that are pathogenic on plants experience a special light regime because the host always seeks the optimum light conditions for photosynthesis – and the pathogen has to cope with this environment. When the pathogen lives under the canopy and is indirectly exposed to sunlight, it is confronted with an altered light spectrum enriched for green and far-red light. Botrytis cinerea, the gray mold fungus, is an aggressive plant pathogen mainly infecting the above-ground parts of the plant. As outlined in this review, the Leotiomycete maintains a highly sophisticated light signaling machinery, integrating (near)-UV, blue, green, red and far-red light signals by use of at least eleven potential photoreceptors to trigger a variety of responses, i.e. protection (pigmentation, enzymatic systems), morphogenesis (conidiation, apothecial development), entrainment of a circadian clock, and positive and negative tropism of multicellular (conidiophores, apothecia) and unicellular structures (conidial germ tubes). In that sense, ‘looking through the eyes’ of this plant pathogen will expand our knowledge of fungal photobiology.

Keywords

Botrytis
Plant pathogen
Light
Photoreceptors
Virulence
Development

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