Literature DB >> 23441578

Host-induced gene silencing in barley powdery mildew reveals a class of ribonuclease-like effectors.

Clara Pliego1, Daniela Nowara, Giulia Bonciani, Dana M Gheorghe, Ruo Xu, Priyanka Surana, Ehren Whigham, Dan Nettleton, Adam J Bogdanove, Roger P Wise, Patrick Schweizer, Laurence V Bindschedler, Pietro D Spanu.   

Abstract

Obligate biotrophic pathogens of plants must circumvent or counteract defenses to guarantee accommodation inside the host. To do so, they secrete a variety of effectors that regulate host immunity and facilitate the establishment of pathogen feeding structures called haustoria. The barley powdery mildew fungus Blumeria graminis f. sp. hordei produces a large number of proteins predicted to be secreted from haustoria. Fifty of these Blumeria effector candidates (BEC) were screened by host-induced gene silencing (HIGS), and eight were identified that contribute to infection. One shows similarity to β-1,3 glucosyltransferases, one to metallo-proteases, and two to microbial secreted ribonucleases; the remainder have no similarity to proteins of known function. Transcript abundance of all eight BEC increases dramatically in the early stages of infection and establishment of haustoria, consistent with a role in that process. Complementation analysis using silencing-insensitive synthetic cDNAs demonstrated that the ribonuclease-like BEC 1011 and 1054 are bona fide effectors that function within the plant cell. BEC1011 specifically interferes with pathogen-induced host cell death. Both are part of a gene superfamily unique to the powdery mildew fungi. Structural modeling was consistent, with BEC1054 adopting a ribonuclease-like fold, a scaffold not previously associated with effector function.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23441578     DOI: 10.1094/MPMI-01-13-0005-R

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Plant Microbe Interact        ISSN: 0894-0282            Impact factor:   4.171


  54 in total

Review 1.  Effectors of Filamentous Plant Pathogens: Commonalities amid Diversity.

Authors:  Marina Franceschetti; Abbas Maqbool; Maximiliano J Jiménez-Dalmaroni; Helen G Pennington; Sophien Kamoun; Mark J Banfield
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  2017-03-29       Impact factor: 11.056

2.  Mode of Action of the Catalytic Site in the N-Terminal Ribosome-Inactivating Domain of JIP60.

Authors:  Michal Przydacz; Rhian Jones; Helen G Pennington; Gerard Belmans; Maya Bruderer; Rachel Greenhill; Tia Salter; Peter A D Wellham; Ernesto Cota; Pietro D Spanu
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2020-03-02       Impact factor: 8.340

3.  The barley powdery mildew candidate secreted effector protein CSEP0105 inhibits the chaperone activity of a small heat shock protein.

Authors:  Ali Abdurehim Ahmed; Carsten Pedersen; Torsten Schultz-Larsen; Mark Kwaaitaal; Hans Jørgen Lyngs Jørgensen; Hans Thordal-Christensen
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2015-03-13       Impact factor: 8.340

Review 4.  Roles of RNA silencing in viral and non-viral plant immunity and in the crosstalk between disease resistance systems.

Authors:  Sara Lopez-Gomollon; David C Baulcombe
Journal:  Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2022-06-16       Impact factor: 113.915

Review 5.  Infection Strategies and Pathogenicity of Biotrophic Plant Fungal Pathogens.

Authors:  Johannes Mapuranga; Na Zhang; Lirong Zhang; Jiaying Chang; Wenxiang Yang
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2022-06-02       Impact factor: 6.064

6.  RNAi-mediated silencing of PEX6 and GAS1 genes of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici confers resistance against Fusarium wilt in tomato.

Authors:  Meenakshi Tetorya; Manchikatla Venkat Rajam
Journal:  3 Biotech       Date:  2021-09-21       Impact factor: 2.893

7.  Mosaic genome structure of the barley powdery mildew pathogen and conservation of transcriptional programs in divergent hosts.

Authors:  Stéphane Hacquard; Barbara Kracher; Takaki Maekawa; Saskia Vernaldi; Paul Schulze-Lefert; Emiel Ver Loren van Themaat
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-05-21       Impact factor: 11.205

8.  Why did filamentous plant pathogens evolve the potential to secrete hundreds of effectors to enable disease?

Authors:  Hans Thordal-Christensen; Paul R J Birch; Pietro D Spanu; Ralph Panstruga
Journal:  Mol Plant Pathol       Date:  2018-04       Impact factor: 5.663

9.  Isolation of Powdery Mildew Haustoria from Infected Barley.

Authors:  Linhan Li; Benjamin Collier; Pietro D Spanu
Journal:  Bio Protoc       Date:  2019-07-20

10.  Identification of promising host-induced silencing targets among genes preferentially transcribed in haustoria of Puccinia.

Authors:  Chuntao Yin; Samantha I Downey; Naeh L Klages-Mundt; Sowmya Ramachandran; Xianming Chen; Les J Szabo; Michael Pumphrey; Scot H Hulbert
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2015-08-05       Impact factor: 3.969

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