학술논문

Characterization of Microbotryum lychnidis-dioicae Secreted Effector Proteins, Their Potential Host Targets, and Localization in a Heterologous Host Plant
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Journal of Fungi. April, 2024, Vol. 10 Issue 4
Subject
Arabidopsis thaliana -- Genetic aspects -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Fluorescence -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Amino acids -- Health aspects -- Analysis -- Genetic aspects
Infection -- Genetic aspects
Proteins -- Genetic aspects -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Fungi -- Health aspects -- Genetic aspects -- Analysis
Language
English
ISSN
2309-608X
Abstract
Microbotryum lychnidis-dioicae is an obligate fungal species colonizing the plant host, Silene latifolia. The fungus synthesizes and secretes effector proteins into the plant host during infection to manipulate the host for completion of the fungal lifecycle. The goal of this study was to continue functional characterization of such M. lychnidis-dioicae effectors. Here, we identified three putative effectors and their putative host-plant target proteins. MVLG_02245 is highly upregulated in M. lychnidis-dioicae during infection; yeast two-hybrid analysis suggests it targets a tubulin α-1 chain protein ortholog in the host, Silene latifolia. A potential plant protein interacting with MVLG_06175 was identified as CASP-like protein 2C1 (CASPL2C1), which facilitates the polymerization of the Casparian strip at the endodermal cells. Proteins interacting with MVLG_05122 were identified as CSN5a or 5b, involved in protein turnover. Fluorescently labelled MVLG_06175 and MVLG_05122 were expressed in the heterologous plant, Arabidopsis thaliana. MVLG_06175 formed clustered granules at the tips of trichomes on leaves and in root caps, while MVLG_05122 formed a band structure at the base of leaf trichomes. Plants expressing MVLG_05122 alone were more resistant to infection with Fusarium oxysporum. These results indicate that the fungus might affect the formation of the Casparian strip in the roots and the development of trichomes during infection as well as alter plant innate immunity.
Author(s): Ming-Chang Tsai [1]; Michelle T. Barati [2]; Venkata S. Kuppireddy [1]; William C. Beckerson [1,†]; Grace Long [1]; Michael H. Perlin (corresponding author) [1,*] 1. Introduction The smut fungus [...]