Abstract: Fungal interactions with plant roots, either beneficial or detrimental, have a crucial impact on agriculture and ecosystems. The cosmopolitan plant pathogen Fusarium oxysporum (Fo) provokes vascular-wilt disease in more than a hundred different crops. On angiosperms
(flowering plants), Fo exhibits exquisite adaptation to the plant xylem niche as well as host-
specific pathogenicity in the form of wilting, both of which are conferred by effectors secreted in xylem (SIX) and encoded on lineage-specific genomic regions. However, such isolates also
can colonize the roots of other plants asymptomatically as endophytes or even protect them
against pathogenic strains. The molecular determinants of endophytic multi-host
compatibility is largely unknown. Moreover, the strategies that enable these pathogens to
exploit deeper tissues such as xylem and what led to the emergence of such systemic
infections in plants remain elusive. Also, to date, the origin of accessory regions and how
these different genomic compartments orchestrate an infection process remains unresolved.
In this talk I will introduce our work on how multi-host compatibility is established in
vascular wilts, how the infection process is coordinated to lead to diverse interaction
outcomes, such as pathogenic and endophytic; and our recent initiatives to define the
compatibility regulatory mechanisms both in- and ex-planta to understand these complex
interactions hidden beneath.