학술논문

Proteome Analysis of Walnut Bacterial Blight Disease
Document Type
article
Source
International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 21(20)
Subject
Plant Biology
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Aetiology
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Bacterial Infections
Computational Biology
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Ontology
Host-Pathogen Interactions
Juglans
Plant Diseases
Proteome
Proteomics
Xanthomonas
walnut blight
fruit
proteomics
disease susceptibility
adaptation
LC-MS
MS
virulence
LC-MS/MS
Other Chemical Sciences
Genetics
Other Biological Sciences
Chemical Physics
Biochemistry and cell biology
Microbiology
Medicinal and biomolecular chemistry
Language
Abstract
The interaction between the plant host, walnut (Juglans regia; Jr), and a deadly pathogen (Xanthomonas arboricola pv. juglandis 417; Xaj) can lead to walnut bacterial blight (WB), which depletes walnut productivity by degrading the nut quality. Here, we dissect this pathosystem using tandem mass tag quantitative proteomics. Walnut hull tissues inoculated with Xaj were compared to mock-inoculated tissues, and 3972 proteins were identified, of which 3296 are from Jr and 676 from Xaj. Proteins with differential abundance include oxidoreductases, proteases, and enzymes involved in energy metabolism and amino acid interconversion pathways. Defense responses and plant hormone biosynthesis were also increased. Xaj proteins detected in infected tissues demonstrate its ability to adapt to the host microenvironment, limiting iron availability, coping with copper toxicity, and maintaining energy and intermediary metabolism. Secreted proteases and extracellular secretion apparatus such as type IV pilus for twitching motility and type III secretion effectors indicate putative factors recognized by the host. Taken together, these results suggest intense degradation processes, oxidative stress, and general arrest of the biosynthetic metabolism in infected nuts. Our results provide insights into molecular mechanisms and highlight potential molecular tools for early detection and disease control strategies.