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Exploiting breakdown in nonhost effector-target interactions to boost host disease resistance.

Hazel McLellanSarah E HarveyJens SteinbrennerMiles R ArmstrongQin HeRachel ClewesLeighton PritchardWei WangShumei WangThomas NussbaumerBushra Saeed DohaiQingquan LuoPriyanka KumariHui DuanAna RobertsPetra C BoevinkChristina NeumannNicolas ChampouretIngo HeinPascal Falter-BraunJim L BeynonKatherine J DenbyPaul R J Birch
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Plants are resistant to most microbial species due to nonhost resistance (NHR), providing broad-spectrum and durable immunity. However, the molecular components contributing to NHR are poorly characterised. We address the question of whether failure of pathogen effectors to manipulate nonhost plants plays a critical role in NHR. RxLR (Arg-any amino acid-Leu-Arg) effectors from two oomycete pathogens, Phytophthora infestans and Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis , enhanced pathogen infection when expressed in host plants ( Nicotiana benthamiana and Arabidopsis, respectively) but the same effectors performed poorly in distantly related nonhost pathosystems. Putative target proteins in the host plant potato were identified for 64 P . infestans RxLR effectors using yeast 2-hybrid (Y2H) screens. Candidate orthologues of these target proteins in the distantly related non-host plant Arabidopsis were identified and screened using matrix Y2H for interaction with RxLR effectors from both P . infestans and H . arabidopsidis . Few P . infestans effector-target protein interactions were conserved from potato to candidate Arabidopsis target orthologues (cAtOrths). However, there was an enrichment of H . arabidopsidis RxLR effectors interacting with cAtOrths. We expressed the cAtOrth AtPUB33, which unlike its potato orthologue did not interact with P . infestans effector PiSFI3, in potato and Nicotiana benthamiana. Expression of AtPUB33 significantly reduced P . infestans colonization in both host plants. Our results provide evidence that failure of pathogen effectors to interact with and/or correctly manipulate target proteins in distantly related non-host plants contributes to NHR. Moreover, exploiting this breakdown in effector-nonhost target interaction, transferring effector target orthologues from non-host to host plants is a strategy to reduce disease.
Keyphrases
  • type iii
  • transcription factor
  • dendritic cells
  • regulatory t cells
  • genome wide
  • candida albicans
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • high throughput
  • single molecule
  • multidrug resistant