Frontiers in Plant Science (Oct 2021)

A Valsa mali Effector Protein 1 Targets Apple (Malus domestica) Pathogenesis-Related 10 Protein to Promote Virulence

  • Weidong Wang,
  • Weidong Wang,
  • Jiajun Nie,
  • Jiajun Nie,
  • Luqiong Lv,
  • Luqiong Lv,
  • Wan Gong,
  • Wan Gong,
  • Shuaile Wang,
  • Shuaile Wang,
  • Mingming Yang,
  • Mingming Yang,
  • Liangsheng Xu,
  • Liangsheng Xu,
  • Mingjun Li,
  • Mingjun Li,
  • Hongxia Du,
  • Hongxia Du,
  • Lili Huang,
  • Lili Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2021.741342
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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To successfully colonize the plants, the pathogenic microbes secrete a mass of effector proteins which manipulate host immunity. Apple valsa canker is a destructive disease caused by the weakly parasitic fungus Valsa mali. A previous study indicated that the V. mali effector protein 1 (VmEP1) is an essential virulence factor. However, the pathogenic mechanism of VmEP1 in V. mali remains poorly understood. In this study, we found that the apple (Malus domestica) pathogenesis-related 10 proteins (MdPR10) are the virulence target of VmEP1 using a yeast two-hybrid screening. By bimolecular fluorescence (BiFC) and coimmunoprecipitation (Co-IP), we confirmed that the VmEP1 interacts with MdPR10 in vivo. Silencing of MdPR10 notably enhanced the V. mali infection, and overexpression of MdPR10 markedly reduced its infection, which corroborates its positive role in plant immunity against V. mali. Furthermore, we showed that the co-expression of VmEP1 with MdPR10 compromised the MdPR10-mediated resistance to V. mali. Taken together, our results revealed a mechanism by which a V. mali effector protein suppresses the host immune responses by interfering with the MdPR10-mediated resistance to V. mali during the infection.

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