PsAF5 functions as an essential adapter for PsPHB2-mediated mitophagy under ROS stress in Phytophthora sojae.
Wenhao LiHongwei ZhuJinzhu ChenBinglu RuQin PengJianqiang MiaoXili LiuPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Host-derived reactive oxygen species (ROS) are an important defense means to protect against pathogens. Although mitochondria are the main intracellular targets of ROS, how pathogens regulate mitochondrial physiology in response to oxidative stress remains elusive. Prohibitin 2 (PHB2) is an inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM) protein, recognized as a mitophagy receptor in animals and fungi. Here, we find that an ANK and FYVE domain-containing protein PsAF5, is an adapter of PsPHB2, interacting with PsATG8 under ROS stress. Unlike animal PHB2 that can recruit ATG8 directly to mitochondria, PsPHB2 in Phytophthora sojae cannot recruit PsATG8 to stressed mitochondria without PsAF5. PsAF5 deletion impairs mitophagy under ROS stress and increases the pathogen's sensitivity to H 2 O 2 , resulting in the attenuation of P. sojae virulence. This discovery of a PsPHB2-PsATG8 adapter (PsAF5) in plant-pathogenic oomycetes reveals that mitophagy induction by IMM proteins is conserved in eukaryotes, but with differences in the details of ATG8 recruitment.
Keyphrases
- reactive oxygen species
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- dna damage
- antimicrobial resistance
- nlrp inflammasome
- binding protein
- stress induced
- staphylococcus aureus
- gram negative
- escherichia coli
- amino acid
- signaling pathway
- high throughput
- induced apoptosis
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- endoplasmic reticulum
- ischemia reperfusion injury