Root Development of Tomato Plants Infected by the Cacao Pathogen Moniliophthora perniciosa Is Affected by Limited Sugar Availability

Plant Cell Environ. 2025 Jan 13. doi: 10.1111/pce.15385. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Moniliophthora perniciosa is the causal agent of the witches' broom disease of cacao (Theobroma cacao), and it can infect the tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) 'Micro-Tom' (MT) cultivar. Typical symptoms of infection are stem swelling and axillary shoot outgrowth, whereas reduction in root biomass is another side effect. Using infected MT, we investigated whether impaired root growth derives from hormonal imbalance or sink competition. Intense stem swelling coincided with a reduction in root biomass, predominantly affecting lateral roots. RNA-seq analyses of root samples identified only a few differentially expressed genes involved in hormone metabolism, and root hormone levels were not expressively altered. Inoculation of the auxin highly-sensitive entire mutant genotype maintained the impaired root phenotype; in contrast, the low-cytokinin MT transgenic line overexpressing CYTOKININ OXIDASE-2 (35S::AtCKX2) with fewer symptoms did not exhibit root growth impairment. Genes involved in cell wall, carbohydrate, and amino acid metabolism were downregulated, accompanied by lower levels of carbohydrate and amino acid in roots, suggesting a reduction in metabolite availability. 13CO2 was supplied to MT plants, and less 13C was detected in the roots of infected MT but not in those of 35S::AtCKX2 line plants, suggesting that cytokinin-mediated sugar sink establishment at the infection site may contribute to impaired root growth. Exogenous sucrose application to roots of infected MT plants partially restored root growth. We propose that the impairment of lateral root development is likely attributed to disrupted sugar signalling and photoassimilate supply by establishing a strong sugar sink at the infected stem.

Keywords: cacao; hormones; lateral roots; sink; witches' broom disease.