Host-Induced Gene Silencing in Barley Powdery Mildew Reveals a Class of Ribonuclease-Like Effectors

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Date

2013-06-01

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Pliego, Clara
Nowara, Daniela
Bonciani, Giulia
Gheorghe, Dana
Xu, Ruo
Surana, Priyanka
Whigham, Ehren
Nettleton, Daniel
Bogdanove, Adam
Wise, Roger

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Abstract

Obligate biotrophic pathogens of plants must circumvent or counteract defenses to guarantee accommodation inside the host. To do so, they secrete a variety of effectors that regulate host immunity and facilitate the establishment of pathogen feeding structures called haustoria. The barley powdery mildew fungus Blumeria graminis f. sp. hordeiproduces a large number of proteins predicted to be secreted from haustoria. Fifty of these Blumeria effector candidates (BEC) were screened by host-induced gene silencing (HIGS), and eight were identified that contribute to infection. One shows similarity to β-1,3 glucosyltransferases, one to metallo-proteases, and two to microbial secreted ribonucleases; the remainder have no similarity to proteins of known function. Transcript abundance of all eight BEC increases dramatically in the early stages of infection and establishment of haustoria, consistent with a role in that process. Complementation analysis using silencing-insensitive synthetic cDNAs demonstrated that the ribonuclease-like BEC 1011 and 1054 are bona fide effectors that function within the plant cell. BEC1011 specifically interferes with pathogen-induced host cell death. Both are part of a gene superfamily unique to the powdery mildew fungi. Structural modeling was consistent, with BEC1054 adopting a ribonuclease-like fold, a scaffold not previously associated with effector function.

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<p>This article is from <em>Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions</em> 26 (2013): 633–642, doi:<a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/MPMI-01-13-0005-R" target="_blank">10.1094/MPMI-01-13-0005-R</a>.</p>

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