Publication | Closed Access
A novel fungal effector from <i>Puccinia graminis</i> suppressing <scp>RNA</scp> silencing and plant defense responses
72
Citations
36
References
2019
Year
Plant Defense GeneGeneticsPlant PathologyFungal Plant PathogensNovel Fungal EffectorPgtsr1s Promote SusceptibilityPlant-pathogen InteractionPgtsr1 Effector ProteinsPlant Defense ResponsesPlant Pathogen EffectorHost-pathogen InteractionsMedicineHost ResistanceGene ExpressionFunctional GenomicsFungal PathogenBiologyPlant ImmunityNatural SciencesMicrobiologySystems BiologyPathogen Effector
Fungal plant pathogens, like rust-causing biotrophic fungi, secrete hundreds of effectors into plant cells to subvert host immunity and promote pathogenicity on their host plants by manipulating specific physiological processes or signal pathways, but the actual function has been demonstrated for very few of these proteins. Here, we show that the PgtSR1 effector proteins, encoded by two allelic genes (PgtSR1-a and PgtSR1-b), from the wheat stem rust pathogen Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici (Pgt), suppress RNA silencing in plants and impede plant defenses by altering the abundance of small RNAs that serve as defense regulators. Expression of the PgtSR1s in plants revealed that the PgtSR1s promote susceptibility to multiple pathogens and partially suppress cell death triggered by multiple R proteins. Overall, our study provides the first evidence that the filamentous fungus P. graminis has evolved to produce fungal suppressors of RNA silencing and indicates that PgtSR1s suppress both basal defenses and effector triggered immunity.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1