We describe in this study punchless, a nonpathogenic mutant from the rice blast fungus M. grisea, obtained by plasmid-mediated insertional mutagenesis. As do most fungal plant pathogens, M. grisea differentiates an infection structure specialized for host penetration called the appressorium. We show that punchless differentiates appressoria that fail to breach either the leaf epidermis or artificial membranes such as cellophane. Cytological analysis of punchless appressoria shows that they have a cellular structure, turgor, and glycogen content similar to those of wild type before penetration, but that they are unable to differentiate penetration pegs. The inactivated gene, PLS1, encodes a putative integral membrane protein of 225 aa (Pls1p). A functional Pls1p-green fluorescent protein fusion protein was detected only in appressoria and was localized in plasma membranes and vacuoles. Pls1p is structurally related to the tetraspanin family. In animals, these proteins are components of membrane signaling complexes controlling cell differentiation, motility, and adhesion. We conclude that PLS1 controls an appressorial function essential for the penetration of the fungus into host leaves. P lant pathogenic fungi are a major threat for crop production worldwide. Several of these fungal pathogens depend on the formation of a specialized cell, called an appressorium, for the successful penetration of host plant surfaces (1, 2). This penetration process is typical of fungal leaf spots such as rice blast caused by the filamentous ascomycete Magnaporthe grisea (3). This disease is disseminated by water-splashed conidia (ref. 4; Fig. 1A). After their adhesion to the host leaf by means of a strong glue (ref. 5; Fig. 1B), conidia germinate and differentiate appressoria at the tips of their germ tubes (Fig. 1C). This developmental process is induced by chemical and physical stimuli from the host surface such as hardness, hydrophobicity, or cutin monomers (2, 3). This dome-shaped, thick-walled, and melanized cell (Fig. 1D) promotes the differentiation of a specialized hypha called the penetration peg that is involved in penetration of plant surfaces (ref. 6; pp in Fig. 1E). The differentiation of appressoria and penetration pegs is the result of complex morphogenetic processes that involve major developmental and metabolic changes (2,3,6). Inside the epidermal plant cell, the penetration peg differentiates into a bulbous infection hypha that invades the whole cell and colonizes the leaf.To isolate genes involved in this infection process, we generated a collection of M. grisea pathogenicity mutants by using plasmid-mediated insertional mutagenesis. This strategy was successful for the cloning of pathogenicity genes in Colletotrichum lindemuthianum (7), Ustilago maydis,** and M. grisea (8,9). In this study, we isolated punchless, a nonpathogenic mutant defective in penetration of plant surfaces. We show that the PLS1 gene is inactivated in punchless and encodes a putative membrane protein related to the tetraspanin family (10...
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