1. A pioneer nematode effector suppresses plant reactive oxygen species burst by interacting with the class III peroxidase.
- Author
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Rui L, Wen TY, Qiu YJ, Yang D, Ye JR, and Wu XQ
- Subjects
- Animals, Plant Diseases parasitology, Peroxidases metabolism, Peroxidases genetics, Helminth Proteins metabolism, Helminth Proteins genetics, Hydrogen Peroxide metabolism, Plant Proteins metabolism, Plant Proteins genetics, Tylenchoidea physiology, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Pinus parasitology, Pinus metabolism
- Abstract
Bursaphelenchus xylophilus is the pathogen of pine wilt disease, which can devastate the pine forest ecosystem. Usually, plant cells generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) as a defensive substance or signalling molecules to resist the infection of nematodes. However, little is known about how B. xylophilus effectors mediate the plant ROS metabolism. Here, we identified a pioneer B. xylophilus Prx3-interacting effector 1 (BxPIE1) expressed in the dorsal gland cells and the intestine. Silencing of the BxPIE1 gene resulted in reduced nematode reproduction and a delay in disease progression during parasitic stages, with the upregulation of pathogenesis-related (PR) genes PtPR-3 (class Ⅳ chitinase) and PtPR-9 (peroxidase). The protein-protein interaction assays further demonstrated that BxPIE1 interacts with a Pinus thunbergii class III peroxidase (PtPrx3), which produces H
2 O2 under biotic stress. The expression of BxPIE1 and PtPrx3 was upregulated during the infection stage. Furthermore, BxPIE1 effectively inhibited H2 O2 generating from class III peroxidase and ascorbate can recover the virulence of siBxPIE1-treated B. xylophilus by scavenging H2 O2 . Taken together, BxPIE1 is an important virulence factor, revealing a novel mechanism utilized by nematodes to suppress plant immunity., (© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2024
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