456 / 2019-02-26 14:23:12
Unravelling a potential pathway linking plasma membrane to chloroplasts and its role in the regulation of plant defence responses
TYLCV,Chloroplast,Defence,N-myristoylation,Tomato,Target signal,Geminivirus
摘要录用
Laura Medina-Puche / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Tan Huang / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Vivek Dogra / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Tabata Rosas-Diaz / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Liping Wang / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Tamara Jimenez-Gongora / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Renyi Liu / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Dan Zhang / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Xue Ding / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Yuanyuan Zhang / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Shanshan Lv / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Chanhong Kim / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Rosa Lozano-Duran / Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai Center for Plant Stress Biology
Plant pathogens need to suppress plant defence responses in order to establish a successful infection. Plants have diverse strategies against viral invasion, which include production of defensive hormones such as salicylic acid (SA). C4, a small protein encoded by Tomato yellow leaf curl virus and essential for infectivity, contains two overlapping localization signals, an N-myristoylation motif and a chloroplast transit peptide, and consistently localizes in two distinct subcellular compartments, namely plasma membrane (PM) and chloroplasts (1). PM localization overrides chloroplast localization, since a non-myristoylable mutant version of C4 (C4G2A) localizes to chloroplasts exclusively; moreover, activation of defence responses leads to a re-localization of C4 from PM to chloroplasts. We have found that C4G2A interferes with retrograde signaling from the chloroplast through the interaction with the chloroplast calcium sensing receptor protein, CAS, which is required for the pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMP)-induced expression of defence genes, SA biosynthesis, and regulation of cytoplasmic calcium oscillations (2), all of them repressed by C4G2A. Interestingly, this dual localization is also present in a number of pathogen effectors and in a subset of defence-related plant proteins. These findings suggest that an intrinsic route in plants delivering proteins from the PM to chloroplasts might be hijacked by plant pathogens to suppress defence responses.
重要日期
  • 会议日期

    06月16日

    2019

    06月21日

    2019

  • 05月01日 2019

    初稿截稿日期

  • 06月21日 2019

    注册截止日期

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