Sink formation during shoot infection of tomato Micro-Tom by
Moniliophthora perniciosa , the causal agent of cacao witches' broom
disease, limits sugar supply for effective development of lateral roots
Abstract
Moniliophthora perniciosa causes the witches’ broom disease of
cacao, and it can infect the tomato Micro-Tom (MT). Typical symptoms are
stem swelling and shoot outgrowth, whereas reduction in root biomass is
another side effect. We investigated whether the impairment of root
growth derives from a hormonal imbalance or sink competition. Intense
stem swelling coincided with a reduction in root biomass, predominantly
of lateral roots. A few genes involved in hormone metabolism were
activated; however, hormonal levels were not altered. Inoculation of the
auxin highly-responsive entire genotype maintained the impaired
root phenotype. Genes involved in root respiration, carbohydrate, amino
acid and cell wall metabolism were repressed, whereas genes linked to
water/nitrogen/phosphorous starvation were upregulated. Lower levels of
sugars and amino acids suggested carbohydrate deprivation. Less
13C accumulated in roots of infected MT, but not in
the symptomless low-cytokinin MT-transgenic line that overexpresses
CYTOKININ OXIDASE-2 ( 35S::AtCKX2). We show evidence that
the impairment of root development potentially derives from a reduction
of photoassimilate supply by the establishment of a strong sink at the
shoot symptomatic infection site, rather than hormonal imbalance. We
speculate that this impact may contribute to the dramatic decrease in
cocoa yields after M. perniciosa invasion.