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HSP90.2 modulates 2Q2-mediated wheat resistance against powdery mildew.

Yan YanYue-Ting GuoChao-Yan ChangXiao-Ming LiMei-Qi ZhangCi-Hang DingDangqun CuiCongwei SunYan RenMeng-Lu WangChaojie XieZhongfu NiQixin SunFeng ChenJin-Ying Gou
Published in: Plant, cell & environment (2023)
Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is a critical food crop feeding the world, but pathogens threaten its production. Wheat Heat Shock Protein 90.2 (HSP90.2) is a pathogen-inducible molecular chaperone folding nascent preproteins. Here, we used wheat HSP90.2 to isolate clients regulated at the post-translational level. Tetraploid wheat hsp90.2 knockout mutant was susceptible to powdery mildew, while the HSP90.2 over-expression line was resistant, suggesting that HSP90.2 was essential for wheat resistance against powdery mildew. We next isolated 1500 clients of HSP90.2, which contained a wide variety of clients with different biological classifications. We utilized 2Q2, a nucleotide-binding leucine repeat-rich (NB-LRR) protein, as a model to investigate the potential of HSP90.2 interactome in fungal resistance. The transgenic line co-suppressing 2Q2 was more susceptible to powdery mildew, suggesting 2Q2 as a novel Pm-resistant gene. The 2Q2 protein resided in chloroplasts, and HSP90.2 played a critical role in the accumulation of 2Q2 in thylakoids. Our data provided over 1500 HSP90.2 clients with a potential regulation at the protein folding process and contributed a non-typical approach to isolate pathogenesis-related proteins. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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