strain, the other – strain) are produced which infect the wheat. The wheat then
producesuredospores, which spread the infection in the wheat field. The
fungus overwinters as diploid teliospores, produced when the two (+ and –)
nuclei fuse (karyogamy). Meiosis occurs in spring to release basidiospores(+ or
- strain) which then infect the barberry host (Fig. 1).Smut fungihave a simpler
life cycle involving only one host (autoecious) and produce masses of
teliospores(the resting stage of the fungus). They are known to infect at least
4000 species of flowering plants, many of economic importance.
Some defenses are mechanical barriers, for instance the waxy cuticle, which
prevents spores from adhering to the leaf or the fungus from penetrating the
leaf. Pathogenic fungi can often only infect a wound site or by entering the leaf
through stomata. Other defenses are endogenous chemicals, for instance the
saponinsare triterpenes(Topic J5) produced by plants which disrupt the
membranes of fungi. Other defenses against fungi are not induced until a
pathogen attacks. This involves expression of defense geneswhich are activated
by a signaling cascade (Topic F3) within the plant. This is triggered by the
Plant defenses
against fungal
diseases
214 Section M – Interactions between plants and other organisms
Table 1. Examples of fungal diseases and the causal fungi
Species and plant disease Phylum of fungus
Various species (soft rots) Zygomycota
Corn (brown spot) Chytridiomycota
Various (powdery mildew) Ascomycota
Elm (Dutch Elm Disease)
Cereals (smuts, rusts) Basidiomycota
KaryogamyTeliospores
2 n
Aecium
(n+n)
US
M
M
RE
W
h
e
a
t
B
a
rb
e
rr
y
nI
ef
c
ti
o
n
In
fe
c
it
o
n
Meiosis
Basidiospores
n (+ and –)
Spermagonia give
spermatia (n)
that unite with
receptive hyphae
(n)
Telium (n+n)
Mycelium
(n+n)
Uredenium
Uredospores
(n+n)
Aeciospore
(n+n)
Overwinter
SPR
ING
Fig. 1. Life cycle of a rust fungus, black stem rust of wheat.