What are pen genes and their function?
penetration
pen gene products restrict pathogen entry at the cell periphery (from plant produced)
deletion mutants show elevated penetration percentages by pathogens
total three proteins: PEN1, PEN2, PEN3
PEN1: syntaxin (used for vesicle transports) —> polarised secretion
PEN2: glycoside hydrolase --> turns non-toxic form of glycsylic compounds into toxic compounds
PEN3: ABC-transporter —> ATP-dependent secretion of toxic compounds, poisons pathogen outside of cell
How does the mechanism of PEN1 work?
PEN1 controls vesicle fusions at sites of attempted fungal invasion
PEN1 (Qa SNARE) in closed conformation (4 helices, anchored by hydrophilic domain in plasmamembrane)
pathogen attack: protein accumulation
active conformational changes —> interaction with another SNARE protein
vesicle tagged with R-SNARE —> vesicle transported to PEN1 —> fusion —> cargo release at fungal penetraton site (cargo = glycosylated proteins, polysaccharides from Golgi)
component recycling
process causes accumulation of cell wall material (callose, cell wall carbohydrates, proteins) at invasion site
What is the chemical difference between cellulose and callose and what are their functions?
Cellulose: beta-1,4-linkeage of glucose (cell wall compound)
Callose: beta-1,3-linkeage of glucose —> results in a linear molecule (cell division, wounds)
What are pmr4 mutants?
pmr4=powdery mildew resistance
harbour mutations in callose synthase gene GSL5 (=glucan synthase-like 5) —> stop codon and t-DNA insertion in putative catalytic region (responsible for polymerization
pmr4/gsl5 mutants produce less callose with the same amount of cell wall material at penetration sites
show enhanced resistance to adapted powdery mildew attack!!
Why does pmr4-1 mutation result in higher resistance?
—> expectation would be that it has lower resistance because it can’t produce callose (or fewer amounts)
higher resistance because mutation results in hyper-induction of pathogen- and SA-induced genes —> constitutive expression of resistance genes also in non-infected plants
enhanced hypersensitive cell death (micro lesions) —> powdery mildew is biotrophic, needs living cells
smaller plants —> higher energy need through constitutive expression
What is hypersensitive response (HR)?
The hypersensitive response (HR) is a defensive response. Infected cells and adjacent cells are killed through programmed cell death (PCD). The number of cells undergoing an HR is usually kept to a (necessary) minimum.
What are effectors, what are the 3 secretion pathways in fungi?
species, race, strain specific
secreted by fungi and oomycetes targeted to apoplast or cytoplasm
contribute to pathogen virulence by targeting plant defences
Secretion pathways:
conventional ER-Golgi secretory route: ER —> Golgi —> Vesicle transport —> exo- + endocytosis
unconventional ER-dependent and Golgi independet route: formation of BIC (=biotrophic interfacial complex)
unconventional MVB(=Multivesicular body)-dependent route: for larger cargos
What happens in the apoplast (regarding effectors)?
Apoplast = space between plasma membrane and pathogen
plants and fungus secrete enzymes that harm each other
fungus: pectinases
plants: PR proteins, glucanases, chitinases, pectinases
What is the difference in the enzyme repertoire of biotrophic and hemi-biotrophic/necrotrophic fungi?
biotrophic pathogens secrete less amounts of cell wall hydrolyzing enzymes (cellulases, hemicellulases, etc.) to limit cell damage (needs host alive) and to avoid triggering host immunity response; have no polysaccharide lyase enzyme!!
hemibiotrophic/necrotrophic pathogens have more and more diverse cell wall degrading enzymes + have polysaccharide lyases (cleave different forms of pectins)
How can pathogens counter plant defense with effector molecules?
pathogens secrete enzyme inhibitors to counteract plant hydrolases
glucanase inhibitor protein (GIP1) from oomycete Phytophora sojae targets soybean EGaseA (endo-beta-1,3-glucanases)
effectors target plant peroxidases which interferes with ROS generation, Peroxidase inhibitor (Pep1) of U. maydis
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