Scientists closer to engineering more resilient food crops
The discovery of a powerful 鈥渨eapon鈥 used by many disease-causing fungi to infect and destroy major food crop staples, such as rice and corn,鈥痗ould鈥痮ffer new strategies to bolster global food security, from 天美传媒 National University (ANU) in collaboration with scientists in Germany and the United States.
Like humans, many fungi rely on plants as a food source. This impacts the yield of food crops. It鈥檚 estimated farmers lose between 10 to 23 per cent of their crops to fungal disease .
The global research team discovered that an enzyme known as a 鈥楴UDIX hydrolase鈥 is used by many fungal pathogens as a weapon鈥痶o cause disease in plants. The findings are published in .
By uncovering the role this enzyme plays in infecting plants, the researchers believe they can engineer more resilient rice crops, as well as other fruit and vegetable crops, capable of safeguarding themselves against disease.
The findings could help bolster food security in nations where rice and corn are major commodities. According to the US Department of Agriculture, rice is the primary staple food for of the world's population.
鈥淢uch of our work focused on the pathogenic fungus鈥Magnaporthe oryzae, which causes鈥痳ice blast disease. Rice is a critically important food staple, and losses from rice blast could feed鈥60 million people each year,鈥 ANU Associate Professor Simon Williams said.
Lead author Dr Carl McCombe, who completed this work as part of his PhD at ANU, said the disease-causing enzyme can infiltrate plant cells and attack a key signalling molecule involved in the sensing of phosphate 鈥 a vital nutrient necessary for plant survival.
He said the enzyme 鈥渉ijacks鈥 key molecular pathways and tricks the plant into thinking it has a shortage of phosphate, activating a starvation-like response in the plant. This allows the pathogen to evade the immune system鈥檚 natural defence mechanisms and cause disease in the crop.
鈥淚n collaboration with colleagues at the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, we were able to reveal the structure of the enzyme in detail using a technique called X-ray crystallography,鈥 Dr McCombe, who is now a postdoctoral researcher at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), said.
鈥淯nderstanding what the enzyme looks like gave us critical insights into how it is used by pathogens to attack plants.鈥
Associate Professor Williams, who led the鈥疉NU research team鈥檚 contribution to this work, said in addition to engineering new crops with a turbocharged immune system, the research findings could also help scientists uncover new ways to deactivate the 鈥渉ijacking effect鈥 of the enzyme, similar to turning it on and off like a light switch.
鈥淥ur research also reveals that the NUDIX hydrolase is used as a 鈥榳eapon鈥 by many different fungi, including ones that are responsible for causing anthracnose disease in fruit, vegetable and seed crops. These diseases impact crop production in foods such as mangoes, melons, corn and chickpeas 鈥 produce that Australians enjoy daily," he said.
鈥淭his suggests our work also has implications to safeguard other important fruit and vegetable staples.鈥
Associate Professor Williams said the findings offer a roadmap to develop new disease management strategies.
鈥淭his could involve engineering the plant鈥檚 immune system to detect the鈥痚nzyme鈥痮r block its function.鈥疶his could help farmers protect their crops鈥痑nd secure global food supplies,鈥 he said.
This work involved scientists from ANU, RWTH Aachen University and Louisiana State University.鈥