Publication | Open Access
A Root-Knot Nematode Secretory Peptide Functions as a Ligand for a Plant Transcription Factor
213
Citations
32
References
2006
Year
Plant Molecular BiologyDevelopmental BiologyParasitism GenesEngineeringRoot GrowthNatural SciencesNematode PestMolecular BiologyPlant PathologyBioactive Nematode PeptidePlant Transcription FactorSystems BiologyProteomicsCell BiologyGene ExpressionPlant HormonePlant Physiology
Parasitism genes expressed in the esophageal gland cells of root-knot nematodes encode proteins that are secreted into host root cells to transform the recipient cells into enlarged multinucleate feeding cells called giant-cells. Expression of a root-knot nematode parasitism gene which encodes a novel 13-amino-acid secretory peptide in plant tissues stimulated root growth. Two SCARECROW-like transcription factors of the GRAS protein family were identified as the putative targets for this bioactive nematode peptide in yeast two-hybrid analyses and confirmed by in vitro and in vivo coimmunoprecipitations. This discovery is the first demonstration of a direct interaction of a nematode-secreted parasitism peptide with a plant-regulatory protein, which may represent an early signaling event in the root-knot nematode-host interaction.
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