| Literature DB >> 34806087 |
Shuguo Hou1, Derui Liu2, Ping He2.
Abstract
Plant plasma membrane-resident immune receptors regulate plant immunity by recognizing microbe-associated molecular patterns (MAMPs), damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), and phytocytokines. Phytocytokines are plant endogenous peptides, which are usually produced in the cytosol and released into the apoplast when plant encounters pathogen infections. Phytocytokines regulate plant immunity through activating an overlapping signaling pathway with MAMPs/DAMPs with some unique features. Here, we highlight the current understanding of phytocytokine production, perception and functions in plant immunity, and discuss how plants and pathogens manipulate phytocytokine signaling for their own benefits during the plant-pathogen warfare.Entities:
Keywords: Damage-associated molecular pattern (DAMP); Pattern-recognition receptor (PRR), pattern-triggered immunity (PTI); Phytocytokine; Plant immunity
Year: 2021 PMID: 34806087 PMCID: PMC8591736 DOI: 10.1007/s44154-021-00009-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stress Biol ISSN: 2731-0450
Classification, perception and functions of phytocytokines
| Type | Phytocytokines | Receptor | Functions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-secreted peptides | Systemin | SYR1 | Induction of proteinase inhibitors, extracellular alkalization, and ethylene emission, mediation of systemic defense response, defense against insect herbivory | Pearce et al. |
| Pep1, Pep2, Pep3 | PEPR1, PEPR2 | Activation of PTI responses, and plant resistance to | Huffaker et al. | |
| ZIP1 | Unknown | Activation of SA defense signaling, maize resistance against | Ziemann et al. | |
| GmPep914, GmPep890 | Unknown | Induction of extracellular alkalization and the expression of defense genes | Yamaguchi et al. | |
| Secreted peptides | PSK | PSKR1 | Attenuation of PTI and SA signaling, activation of JA signaling, increase resistance to necrotrophic pathogens and susceptibility to biotrophic pathogens | Amano et al. |
| PSY1 | PSY1R? | |||
| PIP1, PIP2 | RLK7 | Activation of PTI responses and plant resistance to | Hou et al. | |
| IDA | HAE, HSL2 | Regulation of plant resistance to | Butenko et al. | |
| IDL6 | HAE, HSL2 | Suppression of PTI responses and SA signaling, attenuation plant resistance to | ||
| SCOOP12 | MIK2 | Activation of PTI responses, plant resistance to | Gully et al. | |
| RGF7/GLV4 | RGI3/4 | Activation of PTI responses | Matsuzaki et al. | |
| RGF9/GLV2 | RGI3 | Activation of PTI responses Promotion of FLS2 accumulation | ||
| HypSys | Unknown | Induction of proteinase inhibitors, extracellular alkalization, and ethylene emission, activation of resistance to insect herbivory | Pearce et al. | |
| RALF1 | FER-LLG | Attenuation of PTI, activation of JA signaling | Haruta et al. | |
| RALF17 | Unknown | Activation of PTI responses | ||
| RALF22, RALF23 | FER-LLG | Attenuation of PTI signaling |
Fig. 1A model of phytocytokine maturation and release. After translation, phytocytokine precursors with signal peptide enter into the ER-Golgi secretory pathway, where they undergo post-translational modifications and proteolytic cleavages to remove signal peptide and prodomain, and then are secreted into the apoplast. Phytocytokine precursors without signal peptide enter into the cytosol, where they are maturely processed to remove prodomains. This group of phytocytokines are released into the apoplast likely through unconventional secretion or disrupted plasma membrane. The maturation processing of phytocytokine may also happen in the apoplast
Fig. 2A proposed model of phytocytokine-mediated regulation of plant immunity. Pathogen infections swiftly activate or inhibit the expression of phytocytokine precursor genes, or promote phytocytokine maturation. When released to the apoplast, phytocytokines are perceived by their corresponding receptor- and co-receptors. These perceptions activate ROS burst, Ca2+ influx, and phosphorylation of MAP kinase kinase kinases (MAPKKKs) mediated by BIK1 and/or related RLCKs. Ca2+ may promote phytocytokine maturation. Activated MAPKs may phosphorylate transcription factors (TFs), which further up- or down-regulate the expression of phytocytokine precursor genes and PRR genes, and SA- and/or JA-responsive genes, thus amplifying or attenuating immunity. Phytocytokine signaling may also modulate PRR complex stability and assembly. For example, the complex formation between FLS2 and RGI induced by flg22 increases FLS2 abundance, and the association between FER, FLS2, and BAK1 is promoted or inhibited by RALF17 or RALF23, thus positively or negatively regulates PTI, respectively. Due to limited space, only several of well-studied phytocytokines and their receptors are shown in this Figure