Ruthi Hadar
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Ruthi Hadar.
Eukaryotic Cell | 2005
Sophie Lev; Ruthi Hadar; Paolo Amedeo; Scott E. Baker; O. C. Yoder; Benjamin A. Horwitz
ABSTRACT Redox sensing is a ubiquitous mechanism regulating cellular activity. Fungal pathogens face reactive oxygen species produced by the host plants oxidative burst in addition to endogenous reactive oxygen species produced during aerobic metabolism. An array of preformed and induced detoxifying enzymes, including superoxide dismutase, catalases, and peroxidases, could allow fungi to infect plants despite the oxidative burst. We isolated a gene (CHAP1) encoding a redox-regulated transcription factor in Cochliobolus heterostrophus, a fungal pathogen of maize. CHAP1 is a bZIP protein that possesses two cysteine-rich domains structurally and functionally related to Saccharomyces cerevisiae YAP1. Deletion of CHAP1 in C. heterostrophus resulted in decreased resistance to oxidative stress caused by hydrogen peroxide and menadione, but the virulence of chap1 mutants was unaffected. Upon activation by oxidizing agents or plant signals, a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-CHAP1 fusion protein became localized in the nucleus. Expression of genes encoding antioxidant proteins was induced in the wild type but not in chap1 mutants. Activation of CHAP1 occurred from the earliest stage of plant infection, in conidial germ tubes on the leaf surface, and persisted during infection. Late in the course of infection, after extensive necrotic lesions were formed, GFP-CHAP1 redistributed to the cytosol in hyphae growing on the leaf surface. Localization of CHAP1 to the nucleus may, through changes in the redox state of the cell, provide a mechanism linking extracellular cues to transcriptional regulation during the plant-pathogen interaction.
Eukaryotic Cell | 2003
Prasun K. Mukherjee; Jagannathan Latha; Ruthi Hadar; Benjamin A. Horwitz
ABSTRACT Trichoderma virens is a mycoparasitic fungus used in biocontrol of soilborne plant pathogens. It inhibits or kills plant-pathogenic fungi through production of antifungal antibiotics and parasitism of hyphae and sclerotia. Conidiation, or the production of asexual spores, an inducible process triggered by light or nutrient stress, is an important trait in survival and also development of formulation products. In many fungi, signaling pathways, including mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades, have been implicated in parasitism of host plants as well as in the production of asexual spores. Here, we have studied the role of a MAPK gene, that for TmkA, in conidiation and antagonistic properties of a biocontrol strain of T. virens. Through single- and double-crossover recombination, we obtained three tmkA loss-of-function mutants. The TmkA transcript was not detectable in these mutants. The mutants conidiated in the dark, although photoinduction was normal and the light sensitivities of the wild type and the mutant were the same. The mutants had, overall, normal colony morphology, but their radial growth rate was reduced by about 16%, with no decrease in biomass production. Against Rhizoctonia solani hyphae, the knockout mutants exhibited mycoparasitic coiling and lysis of host hyphae similar to that of the wild type. The mutants, however, were less effective in colonizing the sclerotia of R. solani. On Sclerotium rolfsii, the MAPK loss-of-function mutants had reduced antagonistic properties in confrontation assays and failed to parasitize the sclerotia. TmkA-dependent and -independent pathways are thus involved in antagonism against different hosts. Finally, in contrast to the case for other filamentous fungi studied so far, signaling through a MAPK represses, rather than induces, asexual sporulation.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2008
Aeid Igbaria; Sophie Lev; Mark S. Rose; Bee Na Lee; Ruthi Hadar; Ofir Degani; Benjamin A. Horwitz
Pathogenicity mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), related to yeast FUS3/KSS1, are essential for virulence in fungi, including Cochliobolus heterostrophus, a necrotrophic pathogen causing Southern corn leaf blight. We compared the phenotypes of mutants in three MAPK genes: HOG1, MPS1, and CHK1. The chk1 and mps1 mutants show autolytic appearance, light pigmentation, and dramatic reduction in virulence and conidiation. Similarity of mps1 and chk1 mutants is reflected by coregulation by these two MAPKs of several genes. Unlike chk1, mps1 mutants are female-fertile and form normal-looking appressoria. HOG1 mediates resistance to hyperosmotic and, to a lesser extent, oxidative stress, and is required for stress upregulation of glycerol-3-phosphate phosphatase, transaldolase, and a monosaccharide transporter. Hog1, but not Mps1 or Chk1, was rapidly phosphorylated in response to increased osmolarity. The hog1 mutants have smaller appressoria and cause decreased disease symptoms on maize leaves. Surprisingly, loss of MPS1 in a wild-type or hog1 background improved resistance to some stresses. All three MAPKs contribute to the regulation of central developmental functions under normal and stress conditions, and full virulence cannot be achieved without appropriate input from all three pathways.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004
Prasun K. Mukherjee; Jagannathan Latha; Ruthi Hadar; Benjamin A. Horwitz
ABSTRACT G-protein α subunits are involved in transmission of signals for development, pathogenicity, and secondary metabolism in plant pathogenic and saprophytic fungi. We cloned two G-protein α subunit genes, tgaA and tgaB, from the biocontrol fungus Trichoderma virens. tgaA belongs to the fungal Gαi class, while tgaB belongs to the class defined by gna-2 of Neurospora crassa. We compared loss-of-function mutants of tgaA and tgaB with the wild type for radial growth, conidiation, germination of conidia, the ability to overgrow colonies of Rhizoctonia solani and Sclerotium rolfsii in confrontation assays, and the ability to colonize the sclerotia of these pathogens in soil. Both mutants grew as well as the wild type, sporulated normally, did not sporulate in the dark, and responded to blue light by forming a conidial ring. The tgaA mutants germinated by straight unbranched germ tubes, while tgaB mutants, like the wild type, germinated by wavy and highly branched germ tubes. In confrontation assays, both tgaA and tgaB mutants and the wild type overgrew, coiled, and lysed the mycelia of R. solani, but tgaA mutants had reduced ability to colonize S. rolfsii colonies. In the soil plate assay, both mutants parasitized the sclerotia of R. solani, but tgaA mutants were unable to parasitize the sclerotia of S. rolfsii. Thus, tgaA is involved in antagonism against S. rolfsii, but neither G protein subunit is involved in antagonism against R. solani. T. virens, which has a wide host range, thus employs a G-protein pathway in a host-specific manner.
Eukaryotic Cell | 2004
Sherif Ganem; Shun-Wen Lu; Bee-Na Lee; David Yu-Te Chou; Ruthi Hadar; B. Gillian Turgeon; Benjamin A. Horwitz
ABSTRACT Previous work established that mutations in mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase (CHK1) and heterotrimeric G-protein α (Gα) subunit (CGA1) genes affect the development of several stages of the life cycle of the maize pathogen Cochliobolus heterostrophus. The effects of mutating a third signal transduction pathway gene, CGB1, encoding the Gβ subunit, are reported here. CGB1 is the sole Gβ subunit-encoding gene in the genome of this organism. cgb1 mutants are nearly wild type in vegetative growth rate; however, Cgb1 is required for appressorium formation, female fertility, conidiation, regulation of hyphal pigmentation, and wild-type virulence on maize. Young hyphae of cgb1 mutants grow in a straight path, in contrast to those of the wild type, which grow in a wavy pattern. Some of the phenotypes conferred by mutations in CGA1 are found in cgb1 mutants, suggesting that Cgb1 functions in a heterotrimeric G protein; however, there are also differences. In contrast to the deletion of CGA1, the loss of CGB1 is not lethal for ascospores, evidence that there is a Gβ subunit-independent signaling role for Cga1 in mating. Furthermore, not all of the phenotypes conferred by mutations in the MAP kinase CHK1 gene are found in cgb1 mutants, implying that the Gβ heterodimer is not the only conduit for signals to the MAP kinase CHK1 module. The additional phenotypes of cgb1 mutants, including severe loss of virulence on maize and of the ability to produce conidia, are consistent with CGB1 being unique in the genome. Fluorescent DNA staining showed that there is often nuclear degradation in mature hyphae of cgb1 mutants, while comparable wild-type cells have intact nuclei. These data may be genetic evidence for a novel cell death-related function of the Gβ subunit in filamentous fungi.
Current Genetics | 2006
Mala Mukherjee; Benjamin A. Horwitz; Pramod D. Sherkhane; Ruthi Hadar; Prasun K. Mukherjee
A transcriptional comparison of wild type and a secondary metabolite deficient Trichoderma virens mutant resulted in the identification of six genes similar to those involved in secondary metabolism in other fungi, including four cytochrome P450 genes, one O-methyl transferase and one terpene cylase. Four of the genes (three cytochrome P450s and the cyclase) are located as a cluster. Transcript levels of three of the P450 genes, the O-methyl transferase and the terpene cyclase were measured. These genes are underexpressed in the mutant, which lacks the major secondary metabolites produced by this strain, viridin and viridiol. Expression levels of clones from the differential library with similarity to fungal trehalose synthase and a hydrophobin were also underexpressed in the mutant, while a heat shock protein hsp98 homolog was not. Based on the gene expression pattern and associated secondary metabolite profile, along with similarity to other secondary metabolism pathways in related fungi, we predict that the cluster is associated with the production of a terpene. The terpene could be viridin. This is the first report on cloning of secondary metabolism related genes from T. virens, and of their organization in a cluster, in this biocontrol fungus.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004
Ofir Degani; Rudy Maor; Ruthi Hadar; Amir Sharon; Benjamin A. Horwitz
ABSTRACT Conserved eukaryotic signaling proteins participate in development and disease in plant-pathogenic fungi. Strains with mutations in CGA1, a heterotrimeric G protein G alpha subunit gene of the maize pathogen Cochliobolus heterostrophus, are defective in several developmental pathways. Conidia from CGA1 mutants germinate as abnormal, straight-growing germ tubes that form few appressoria, and the mutants are female sterile. Nevertheless, these mutants can cause normal lesions on plants, unlike other filamentous fungal plant pathogens in which functional homologues of CGA1 are required for full virulence. Δcga1 mutants of C. heterostrophus were less infective of several maize varieties under most conditions, but not all, as virulence was nearly normal on detached leaves. This difference could be related to the rapid senescence of detached leaves, since delaying senescence with cytokinin also had differential effects on the virulence of the wild type and the Δcga1 mutant. In particular, detached leaves may provide a more readily available nutrient source than attached leaves. Decreased fitness of Δcga1 as a pathogen may reflect conditions under which full virulence requires signal transduction through CGA1-mediated pathways. The virulence of these signal transduction mutants is thus affected differentially by the physiological state of the host.
Cellular Microbiology | 2010
Veerubommu Shanmugam; Mordechai Ronen; Samer Shalaby; Olga Larkov; Yocheved Rachamim; Ruthi Hadar; Mark S. Rose; Shmuel Carmeli; Benjamin A. Horwitz; Sophie Lev
The transcription factor ChAP1 of the fungal pathogen of maize, Cochliobolus heterostrophus, responds to oxidative stress by migration to the nucleus and activation of antioxidant genes. Phenolic and related compounds found naturally in the host also trigger nuclear localization of ChAP1, but only slight upregulation of some antioxidant genes. ChAP1 thus senses phenolic compounds without triggering a strong antioxidant response. We therefore searched for genes whose expression is regulated by phenolic compounds and/or ChAP1. The C. heterostrophus genome contains a cluster of genes for metabolism of phenolics. One such gene, catechol dioxygenase CCHD1, was induced at least 10‐fold by caffeic and coumaric acids. At high phenolic concentrations (≥ 1.6 mM), ChAP1 is needed for maximum CCHD1 expression. At micromolar levels of phenolics CCHD1 is as strongly induced in chap1 mutants as in the wild type. The pathogen thus detects phenolics by at least two signalling pathways: one causing nuclear retention of ChAP1, and another triggering induction of CCHD1 expression. The low concentrations required for induction of CCHD1 indicate fungal receptors for plant phenolics. Symbiotic and pathogenic bacteria are known to detect phenolics, and our findings generalize this to a eukaryotic pathogen. Phenolics and related compounds thus provide a ubiquitous plant‐derived signal.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999
Sophie Lev; Amir Sharon; Ruthi Hadar; Hong Ma; Benjamin A. Horwitz
Microbiology | 2004
Gil Kaufman; Benjamin A. Horwitz; Ruthi Hadar; Yehuda Ullmann; Israela Berdicevsky