| Literature DB >> 29358080 |
Jinlong Wang1, Lauren E Grubb2, Jiayu Wang3, Xiangxiu Liang3, Lin Li4, Chulei Gao3, Miaomiao Ma3, Feng Feng3, Meng Li3, Lei Li3, Xiaojuan Zhang3, Feifei Yu3, Qi Xie3, She Chen4, Cyril Zipfel5, Jacqueline Monaghan2, Jian-Min Zhou6.
Abstract
Plant pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) perceive microbial and endogenous molecular patterns to activate immune signaling. The cytoplasmic kinase BIK1 acts downstream of multiple PRRs as a rate-limiting component, whose phosphorylation and accumulation are central to immune signal propagation. Previous work identified the calcium-dependent protein kinase CPK28 and heterotrimeric G proteins as negative and positive regulators of BIK1 accumulation, respectively. However, mechanisms underlying this regulation remain unknown. Here we show that the plant U-box proteins PUB25 and PUB26 are homologous E3 ligases that mark BIK1 for degradation to negatively regulate immunity. We demonstrate that the heterotrimeric G proteins inhibit PUB25/26 activity to stabilize BIK1, whereas CPK28 specifically phosphorylates conserved residues in PUB25/26 to enhance their activity and promote BIK1 degradation. Interestingly, PUB25/26 specifically target non-activated BIK1, suggesting that activated BIK1 is maintained for immune signaling. Our findings reveal a multi-protein regulatory module that enables robust yet tightly regulated immune responses.Keywords: Arabidopsis; Botrytis cinerea; Pseudomonas syringae; calcium-dependent protein kinases; heterotrimeric G proteins; innate immunity; phosphorylation; ubiquitination
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29358080 DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2017.12.026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell ISSN: 1097-2765 Impact factor: 17.970