Abstract
The soil-borne fungal pathogen Verticillium dahliae causes devastating vascular wilt disease in numerous crops, including cotton. In this study, we reveal that VdSOX1, a highly conserved sarcosine oxidase gene, is significantly upregulated during host infection and plays a multifaceted role in fungal physiology and pathogenicity. Functional deletion of VdSOX1 leads to increased fungal virulence, accompanied by enhanced microsclerotia formation, elevated carbon source utilization, and pronounced upregulation of effector genes, including over 50 predicted secreted proteins genes. Moreover, the VdSOX1 knockout strains suppress the expression of key defense-related transcription factors in cotton, such as WRKY, MYB, AP2/ERF, and GRAS families, thereby impairing host immune responses. Transcriptomic analyses confirm that VdSOX1 orchestrates a broad metabolic reprogramming that links nutrient acquisition to immune evasion. Our findings identify VdSOX1 as a central regulator that promotes V. dahliae virulence by upregulating effector gene expression and suppressing host immune responses, offering novel insights into the molecular basis of host-pathogen interactions and highlighting potential targets for disease management.