1. Overexpression of NDR1 leads to pathogen resistance at elevated temperatures
- Author
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Akira Mine, Yong Sig Kim, Brad Day, Huan Chen, Pai Li, Kenichi Tsuda, Saroopa Samaradivakara, and Yi-Ju Lu
- Subjects
Cell signaling ,Arabidopsis Proteins ,Effector ,Physiology ,fungi ,Mutant ,Arabidopsis ,Temperature ,Pseudomonas syringae ,Plant Science ,Plants ,Biology ,Cell biology ,Immune system ,Gene Expression Regulation, Plant ,Immunity ,Gene expression ,Pathogen ,Plant Diseases ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Abiotic and biotic environments influence a myriad of plant-related processes, including growth, development, and the establishment and maintenance of interaction(s) with microbes. As a driver of this signaling between plants and microbes, the role of plant hormones in both surveillance and signaling has emerged as a point of intersection between plant-abiotic and -biotic responses. In the current study, we elucidate a role for NON-RACE-SPECIFIC DISEASE RESISTANCE1 (NDR1) by exploiting effector-triggered immunity (ETI) to define the regulation of plant host immunity in response to both pathogen infection and elevated temperature. We generated time-series RNA sequencing data of WT Col-0, a NDR1 overexpression line, as well as ndr1 and ics1-2 mutant plants under elevated temperature. Not surprisingly, the NDR1-overexpression line showed genotype-specific gene expression changes related to defense response and immune system function. Interestingly, overexpression of NDR1 revealed a role for NDR1 in immune system function; specifically, we describe a mechanism that intersects with Pseudomonas syringae, type-III effector translocation, R-protein signaling complex stabilization, and sustained levels of SA at elevated temperature during ETI. The results described herein support a role for NDR1 in maintaining cell signaling during simultaneous exposure to elevated temperature and avirulent pathogen stressors.One-sentence summaryNDR1 is required for Pst-AvrRpt2 triggered ETI at elevated temperature.
- Published
- 2022
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