| Literature DB >> 29131851 |
Mingjun Gao1, Xin Yin1, Weibing Yang1, Sin Man Lam2, Xiaohong Tong3, Jiyun Liu1, Xin Wang1, Qun Li1, Guanghou Shui2, Zuhua He1.
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29131851 PMCID: PMC5703576 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006724
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Fig 1Expression of OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 was suppressed in responses to pathogen infection and chemical treatments.
(A) Down-regulation of OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 expression in eight-week-old plants infected with Xoo (strain PXO99A) in a time course of 48 hours. (B, C) Down-regulation of OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 expression in two-week-old seedlings sprayed with 1 mM SA (B) or 300 μM BTH (C). All treatments were repeated for three times with similar results (A-C). The rice Actin1 gene was used as an internal control. Data are shown as means ± SD from three biological replicates (Student’s t-test, *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01).
Fig 2OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 exhibit lipase activities.
(A) Alignment of OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 amino acid sequences with functionally known homologues from Arabidopsis and Tanacetum cinerariifolium. Sequences were aligned using Genedoc. (B) Expression and purification of recombinant OsGLIP1-GST and OsGLIP2-GST proteins in E. coli. (C, D) Lipase activities of OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2. OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 were incubated with p-nitrophenyl acetate (C) and p-nitrophenyl butyrate (D) at 30°C. The absorbance readings were collected every 5 minutes in a time course of 60 min or 120 min. The substrates were incubated with either GST or no protein as controls. Data are shown as means ± SD (n = 3).
Fig 3Lipidomic profiling of OsGLIP1/2-RNAi and overexpression plants.
Leaves from six individual plants (eight-week-old) were mixed as one sample from three representative transgenic lines of each transgene were used to normalize samples. Five leaf samples each genetic background were statistically analysed. (A) Total lipid composition in leaves of eight-week-old plants. (B-F) Abundance of individual lipid species, TAG (B), PA (C), MGDG (D), DAG (E) and DGDG (F). The lipid structures are presented as the number of carbon atoms: total double bonds in the fatty acyl groups. Data are shown as means ± SD (n = 5) of mixed leaf samples from three representative transgenic lines. *P < 0.05 or **P < 0.01, by Student’s t-test and Bonferroni correction for multiple (three comparisons) tests.
Fig 4Disease resistance to bacterial blight in OsGLIP1-OE, OsGLIP2-OE and OsGLIP1/2-RNAi plants.
(A-F) Lesions and statistical analysis of lesion lengths of representative OsGLIP1-OE (A and D), OsGLIP2-OE (B and E) and OsGLIP1/2-RNAi (C and F) lines (eight-week-old) inoculated with bacterial pathogen Xoo at 14 dpi, with the wild type (TP309, WT) as control. Arrows indicate the bottoms of lesions. Data are shown as means ± SD (n > 10). Asterisks indicate significant difference in comparison with the wild-type control (Student’s t-test, *P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01). (G) Disease development during 12 days of inoculation in the representative lines of OsGLIP1-OE, OsGLIP2-OE and OsGLIP1/2-RNAi, compared with the wild type. Data are shown as means ± SD (n > 10). Asterisks indicate significant difference in comparison with the wild-type control (Student’s t-test, ** P < 0.01). (H) Bacterial growth during 12 days of inoculation in the representative lines of OsGLIP1-OE, OsGLIP2-OE and OsGLIP1/2-RNAi, compared with the wild type. Data are shown as means ± SD (n = 3). Asterisks indicate significant difference in comparison with the wild-type control (Student’s t-test, *P < 0.05; ** P < 0.01).
Fig 5Altered expression of pathogenesis-related (PR) genes in OsGLIP1 transgenic plants.
Eight-week-old transgenic and wild-type plants were inoculated with Xoo (strain PXO99A). The induction of the PR genes, PR1a (A), PR1b (B), PR5 (C) and PR10 (D), in response to pathogen infection was compromised in OsGLIP1-OE plants, while silencing of both OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 significantly promoted the induction of the PR genes. Data shown are means ± SD from three biological replicates. Asterisks indicate significant difference in comparison with the wild-type control (Student’s t-test, *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01).
Fig 6OsGLIP genes negatively affect resistance to rice blast.
(A) Eight-week-old plants were inoculated with fungal pathogen M. oryzae by injection. Three leaves from the wild type and a representative line of OsGLIP1-OE, OsGLIP2-OE and OsGLIP1/2-RNAi transgenic plants were shown at 7 dpi. (B) Disease index of M. oryzae in the infected leaves of the wild-type and transgenic plants. Data are shown as relative lesion area compared to the whole leaf. Student’s t-test, ** P < 0.01.
Fig 7Expression patterns of OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2.
(A) Tissue-specific expression of OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 in different tissues detected by qRT-PCR. The expression level of OsGLIP1 was normalized to that of young seedling and OsGLIP2 to panicle. Data shown are means ±SD from three biological replicates. (B, C) GUS staining of pOsGLIP1::GUS and pOsGLIP2::GUS transgenic plants revealed OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 expression in panicle, leaf, leaf sheath, node and internode of heading plants. Scale bars = 0.5 cm.
Fig 8Subcellular localization of OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2.
(A) Localization of OsGLIP1-GFP and OsGLIP2-GFP in the root cells of transgenic plants. OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 were fused with GFP and expressed under the control of the maize Ubiquitin (Ubi1) promoter in the stable transgenic rice plants. Scale bars = 20 μm. (B) A 3D projection of OsGLIP1-GFP fluorescence signals. Scale bar = 20 μm. (C) Images of OsGLIP1-GFP labelled vesicle-like structures (Type I and Type II). Scale bar = 2 μm. (D) Size distribution of OsGLIP1-GFP labelled vesicles. The size of vesicles is represented by the diameter. (E) The localization of OsGLIP1-GFP in response to BFA treatment, in comparison with mock treatment. Scale bar = 20 μm. (F) Co-localization of OsGLIP1-GFP with Nile Red that labels lipid droplets. Scale bars = 20 μm (left) or 5 μm (right). (G) Distribution of OsGLIP1-GFP and OsGLIP2-GFP proteins in fractionated membranes of two-week-old rice seedlings. Microsomal membranes were fractionated on linear 20% to 55% (w/v) sucrose gradients. Equal volumes of protein samples were separated on SDS-PAGE gel and analysed by immunoblot using antibodies specific for GFP (GLIP1/2-GFP), BiP2 (ER), HSP70 (cytoplasm) and ACTIN. Note that OsGLIP1 and OsGLIP2 mainly localize to the lipid bodies (cytoplasm) and the ER.
Fig 9Proper intracellular localization is essential for OsGLIP1 function in rice defense responses.
(A) Schematic diagram shows full-length OsGLIP1 with its signal peptide (SP) and the truncated protein without SP (OsGLIP1ΔSP-GFP) or SP alone (OsGLIP1SP-GFP) fused with GFP. (B-D) Subcellular localization of OsGLIP1 -GFP (B) OsGLIP1ΔSP-GFP (C) and OsGLIP1SP-GFP (D) proteins in root cells of transgenic plants. Note that removing of the signal peptide (SP) abolished OsGLIP1-GFP ER and lipid body targeting, while the SP alone was sufficient for the subcellular compartment targeting. Scale bars = 20 μm. (E, F) Deletion of the signal peptide attenuated OsGLIP1 action in suppressing plant immunity. Lesions (E) and lesion lengths (F) of representative OsGLIP1-GFP and OsGLIP1-GFP transgenic plants inoculated with Xoo. Note that the OsGLIP1-GFP fusion protein also suppressed rice defense, while OsGLIP1ΔSP-GFP lost its immune inhibition capacity. Arrows indicate bottoms of lesions. Data are shown as means ± SD (n > 10). Scale bar in (E) = 1cm. Student’s t-test, **P < 0.01.
Fig 10Exogenous feeding of MGDG and DGDG impairs rice disease resistance.
(A) Two-week-old seedling leaves were cultured in liquid medium supplemented with MGDG or DGDG (100 μM with 0.1% Tween-20) for 24 hours. The treated plants were extensively washed and then inoculated with Xoo (strain PXO99A). Lesion lengths of MGDG and DGDG-fed plants were measured at 10 dpi with three biological replicates (> 10 plants each replicate). Data are shown as means ± SD from three biological replicates. (B) Bacterial growth in the MGDG and DGDG-fed plants at 0, 3 and 6 dpi, with mock treatment as control. Data are shown as means ± SD from three biological replicates. (C-E) Relative expression levels of PR genes PR1a (C), PR5 (D) and PR10 (E) in MGDG/DGDG treated leaves at 0 and 48 hpi. Data are shown as means ± SD from three biological replicates (n = 3). Student’s t-test, *P<0.05, **P < 0.01 (A to E).