Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (May 2006)

A Root-Knot Nematode Secretory Peptide Functions as a Ligand for a Plant Transcription Factor

  • Guozhong Huang,
  • Ruihua Dong,
  • Rex Allen,
  • Eric L. Davis,
  • Thomas J. Baum,
  • Richard S. Hussey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1094/mpmi-19-0463
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 5
pp. 463 – 470

Abstract

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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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