Fungal Endophytes of Plants: Friend or Foe?

A special issue of Journal of Fungi (ISSN 2309-608X). This special issue belongs to the section "Fungi in Agriculture and Biotechnology".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 28 February 2025 | Viewed by 922

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Entomology, Plant Pathology, and Weed Science, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA
Interests: pests and diseases; plant pathology; curly top virus; fungal endophyte of locoweed; plant diseases

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Fungal endophytes, fungi that live inside of plants, interact with plants as beneficials, commensals, or pathogens. The roles of the endophytes may change as the plant matures or with changes in environmental conditions. Understanding the ecology and epidemiology of endophytes and characterizing the fungal plant interactions are essential. This Special Issue will cover a variety of topics on fungal endophytes including their plant interactions, their ecological roles, characterization of the biology of the endophytes, and transmission of the endophytes. In addition, this Special Issue may include toxins or other secondary metabolites produced by endophytes and the pathogenicity of the endophytes, as well as how fungal endophytes influence the microbiota of the host plant and the rhizosphere microbiota.

Research completed at the Guest Editor's laboratory: The Creamer laboratory studies the roles that fungal endophytes of poisonous plants such as locoweeds play in the toxicity of the plant. They are characterizing the Alternaria section Undifilum sp., Slafractonia leguminicola and the Chaetothyriales endophyte of Ipomoea, which produce the toxin swainsonine that is poisonous to grazing animals. The lab investigates the genetics of the fungi and toxic plants and the ecological roles of the fungi within their host plants. The lab also characterizes the toxin biosynthetic pathway in various swainsonine-producing fungi. Rebecca Creamer and her lab have published 33 papers related to fungal endophytes and their poisonous plant hosts. 

Prof. Dr. Rebecca Creamer
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • fungal endophyte
  • ecology
  • transmission
  • pathogenicity

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

15 pages, 1608 KiB  
Article
Induced Defense in Ryegrass–Epichloë Symbiosis Against Listronotus bonariensis: Impact on Peramine Levels and Pest Performance
by Manuel Chacón-Fuentes, Gunnary León-Finalé, Marcelo Lizama, Gastón Gutiérrez-Gamboa, Daniel Martínez-Cisterna, Andrés Quiroz and Leonardo Bardehle
J. Fungi 2025, 11(1), 50; https://doi.org/10.3390/jof11010050 - 9 Jan 2025
Viewed by 547
Abstract
The Argentine stem weevil (ASW), a major pest in ryegrass pastures, causes significant agricultural losses. Ryegrass can establish a symbiotic association with Epichloë endophytic fungi, which supply chemical defenses, including peramine. This symbiosis helps protect ryegrass by providing peramine, which acts as a [...] Read more.
The Argentine stem weevil (ASW), a major pest in ryegrass pastures, causes significant agricultural losses. Ryegrass can establish a symbiotic association with Epichloë endophytic fungi, which supply chemical defenses, including peramine. This symbiosis helps protect ryegrass by providing peramine, which acts as a primary defense. In addition, ryegrass can activate induced defense mechanisms, with peramine remaining the central agent in response to herbivorous insect attacks. Therefore, this study assessed the feeding of the ASW on ryegrass carrying endophytic fungus and peramine levels in aerial organs and its effects on pest performance. Argentine stem weevil adults and larvae were placed on ryegrass leaves and stems to assess feeding. Two treatments were used: endophyte-free plants and endophyte-colonized plants. After ASW feeding damage, insect consumption was measured by the leaf area consumed. To evaluate peramine production and its increase in response to ASW attack, peramine levels in leaves were analyzed using liquid chromatography. Damaged E+ ryegrass plants showed significant increases in peramine, with adult and larval herbivory raising levels by 291% and 216% in stems and by 135% and 85% in leaves, respectively, compared to controls. Endophyte-free (E−) plants experienced more ASW damage, as insects preferred feeding on them, showing reduced activity as peramine levels rose in endophyte-infected (E+) plants. An oviposition assay confirmed insect preference for endophyte-free (E−) plants. Additionally, larvae reared on endophyte-infected (E+) plants had lower survival rates, correlating negatively with peramine levels. These results emphasize peramine’s role in strengthening ryegrass defenses against ASW, impacting both feeding and larval development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Fungal Endophytes of Plants: Friend or Foe?)
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