Login Join Sitemap Contact us  


Research 
 
 
  The nuclear effector MoHTR3 of Magnaporthe oryzae modulates host defence signalling in the biotrophic stage of rice infection  
 
 
  Authours
 Sehee Lee, Ronny Völz, You- Jin Lim, William Harris, Seongbeom Kim, Yong- Hwan Lee
  Title  The nuclear effector MoHTR3 of Magnaporthe oryzae modulates host defence signalling in the biotrophic stage of rice infection
  Journal  MOLECULAR PLANT PATHOLOGY, 2023 (24) ~
  Abstract
 Fungal effectors play a pivotal role in suppressing the host defence system, and their evolution is highly dynamic. By comparative sequence analysis of plant-pathogenic fungi and Magnaporthe oryzae, we identified the small secreted C2 H2 zinc finger protein MoHTR3. MoHTR3 exhibited high conservation in M. oryzae strains but low conservation among other plant-pathogenic fungi, suggesting an emerging evolutionary selection process. MoHTR3 is exclusively expressed in the biotrophic stage of fungal invasion, and the encoded protein localizes to the biotrophic interfacial complex (BIC) and the host cell nucleus. The signal peptide crucial for MoHTR3\' secretion to the BIC and the protein section required for its translocation to the nucleus were both identified by a functional protein domain study. The host-nuclear localization of MoHTR3 suggests a function as a transcriptional modulator of host defence gene induction. After ¥ÄMohtr3 infection, the expression of jasmonic acid- and ethylene-associated genes was diminished in rice, in contrast to when the MoHTR3-overexpressing strain (MoHTR3ox) was applied. The transcript levels of salicylic acid- and defence-related genes were also affected after ¥ÄMohtr3 and MoHTR3ox application. In pathogenicity assays, ¥ÄMohtr3 was indistinguishable from the wild type. However, MoHTR3ox-infected plants showed diminished lesion formation and hydrogen peroxide accumulation, accompanied by a decrease in susceptibility, suggesting that the MoHTR3-induced manipulation of host cells affects host-pathogen interaction. MoHTR3 emphasizes the role of the host nucleus as a critical target for the pathogen-driven manipulation of host defence mechanisms and underscores the ongoing evolution of rice blast\'s arms race.
  Link
 
 
     
 
     
 
 
. About us
. Research
. Course
. News
. Board
. Sitelink
 
     
 
  Department of Agricultural Biotechnology, Seoul National University, Korea
Tel) +82-2-880-4674, +82-2-880-4684    Fax) +82-2-873-2317