Target degradation specificity of phytoplasma effector phyllogen is regulated by the recruitment of host proteasome shuttle protein.
Masato SuzukiYugo KitazawaNozomu IwabuchiKensaku MaejimaJuri MatsuyamaOki MatsumotoKenro OshimaShigetou NambaYasuyuki YamajiPublished in: Molecular plant pathology (2023)
Phytoplasmas infect a wide variety of plants and can cause distinctive symptoms including the conversion of floral organs into leaf-like organs, known as phyllody. Phyllody is induced by an effector protein family called phyllogens, which interact with floral MADS-box transcription factors (MTFs) responsible for determining the identity of floral organs. The MTF/phyllogen complex then interacts with the proteasomal shuttle protein RADIATION SENSITIVE23 (RAD23), which facilitates delivery of the MTF/phyllogen complex to the host proteasome for MTF degradation. Previous studies have indicated that the MTF degradation specificity of phyllogens is determined by their ability to bind to MTFs. However, in the present study, we discovered a novel mechanism determining the degradation specificity through detailed functional analyses of a phyllogen homologue of rice yellow dwarf phytoplasma (PHYL RYD ). PHYL RYD degraded a narrower range of floral MTFs than other phyllody-inducing phyllogens, resulting in compromised phyllody phenotypes in plants. Interestingly, PHYL RYD was able to bind to some floral MTFs that PHYL RYD was unable to efficiently degrade. However, the complex of PHYL RYD and the non-degradable MTF could not interact with RAD23. These results indicate that the MTF degradation specificity of PHYL RYD is correlated with the ability to form the MTF/PHYL RYD /RAD23 ternary complex, rather than the ability to bind to MTF. This study elucidated that phyllogen target specificity is regulated by both the MTF-binding ability and RAD23 recruitment ability of the MTF/phyllogen complex.