| Literature DB >> 32887298 |
Stefan Engelhardt1, Adriana Trutzenberg1, Ralph Hückelhoven1.
Abstract
Rho proteins of plants (ROPs) form a specific clade of Rho GTPases, which are involved in either plant immunity or susceptibility to diseases. They are intensively studied in grass host plants, in which ROPs are signaling hubs downstream of both cell surface immune receptor kinases and intracellular nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat receptors, which activate major branches of plant immune signaling. Additionally, invasive fungal pathogens may co-opt the function of ROPs for manipulation of the cytoskeleton, cell invasion and host cell developmental reprogramming, which promote pathogenic colonization. Strikingly, mammalian bacterial pathogens also initiate both effector-triggered susceptibility for cell invasion and effector-triggered immunity via Rho GTPases. In this review, we summarize central concepts of Rho signaling in disease and immunity of plants and briefly compare them to important findings in the mammalian research field. We focus on Rho activation, downstream signaling and cellular reorganization under control of Rho proteins involved in disease progression and pathogen resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Arabidopsis; ROP GTPase; barley; disease susceptibility; plant immunity; rice
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32887298 PMCID: PMC7565977 DOI: 10.3390/cells9092016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Important classes of G-proteins in eukaryotes. Heterotrimeric versus monomeric small GTPases as present in plants and non-plant eukaryotes (referring only to animals and true fungi here). Rat sarcoma (RAS) proteins are absent from plants, whereas Rho proteins of plants (ROPs) build an exclusive class of Rho family GTPases in plants.
Figure 2Rice MTI and ETI signaling via OsRAC1 during interaction with a parasitic fungus. Rice OsRAC1 is activated via diverse GEF proteins (PRONE GEF1 and SPK1) in either chitin-triggered cell surface PRR-mediated or effector-triggered NLR-mediated immunity.
Figure 3Barley cell surface ROP signaling in susceptibility to parasitic fungal cell entry. The barley ROP protein HvRACB might be activated from the cell surface and supports fungal entry into barley epidermal cells with support from RIC and RIP scaffold proteins. The fungal effector ROPIP1 can directly bind RACB and support host cell entry. RACB activity and abundance are further controlled via MAGAP1 and RBK1, respectively. Postulated components are bordered with dashed lines. Dashed arrows show indirect, postulated or speculative interactions.