MoIug4 is a novel secreted effector promoting rice blast by counteracting host OsAHL1-regulated ethylene gene transcription.
Xinyu LiuYixin GaoZiqian GuoNian WangAlex WegnerJintao WangXi ZouJiexiong HuMuxing LiuHaifeng ZhangXiaobo ZhengPing WangUlrich SchaffrathZhengguang ZhangPublished in: The New phytologist (2022)
Magnaporthe oryzae secretes several effectors that modulate and hijack rice processes to colonize host cells, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We report on a novel cytoplasmic effector MoIug4 that targets the rice ethylene pathway as a transcription repressor to subvert host immunity. We found that MoIug4 binds to the promoter of the host OsEIN2 gene that encodes a central signal transducer in the ethylene-signaling pathway. We also identified a MoIug4 interacting protein, OsAHL1, which acts as an AT-hook motif-containing protein binding to the A/T-rich promoter regions. Our knockout and overexpression studies showed that OsAHL1 positively regulates plant immunity in response to M. oryzae infection. OsAHL1 exhibits transcriptional regulatory activities by binding the OsEIN2 promoter region, similar to MoIug4. Intriguingly, we found that MoIug4 exhibits a higher binding affinity than OsAHL1 to the OsEIN2 promoter, suggesting differential regulatory specificities. These results revealed a counter-defense strategy by which the pathogen effector suppresses the activation of host defense genes by interfering with host transcription activator functions.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- genome wide identification
- dna methylation
- signaling pathway
- gene expression
- dna binding
- genome wide
- dendritic cells
- induced apoptosis
- regulatory t cells
- copy number
- protein protein
- immune response
- small molecule
- inflammatory response
- cell proliferation
- genome wide analysis
- case control
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- heat shock protein
- toll like receptor