| Literature DB >> 30595554 |
Yingnan Hou1, Yi Zhai1, Li Feng2, Hana Z Karimi3, Brian D Rutter3, Liping Zeng1, Du Seok Choi1, Bailong Zhang4, Weifeng Gu5, Xuemei Chen4, Wenwu Ye6, Roger W Innes3, Jixian Zhai2, Wenbo Ma7.
Abstract
RNA silencing (RNAi) has a well-established role in anti-viral immunity in plants. The destructive eukaryotic pathogen Phytophthora encodes suppressors of RNAi (PSRs), which enhance plant susceptibility. However, the role of small RNAs in defense against eukaryotic pathogens is unclear. Here, we show that Phytophthora infection of Arabidopsis leads to increased production of a diverse pool of secondary small interfering RNAs (siRNAs). Instead of regulating endogenous plant genes, these siRNAs are found in extracellular vesicles and likely silence target genes in Phytophthora during natural infection. Introduction of a plant siRNA in Phytophthora leads to developmental deficiency and abolishes virulence, while Arabidopsis mutants defective in secondary siRNA biogenesis are hypersusceptible. Notably, Phytophthora effector PSR2 specifically inhibits secondary siRNA biogenesis in Arabidopsis and promotes infection. These findings uncover the role of siRNAs as antimicrobial agents against eukaryotic pathogens and highlight a defense/counter-defense arms race centered on trans-kingdom gene silencing between hosts and pathogens.Entities:
Keywords: RNA interference; RNA-silencing suppressor; host-induced gene silencing; microRNA; pathogenesis; plant immunity; secondary small RNAs; virulence factor
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30595554 PMCID: PMC9208300 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2018.11.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 31.316