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ATG7 contributes to plant basal immunity towards fungal infection
Authors:Heike D Lenz  Richard D Vierstra  Thorsten Nürnberger  Andrea A Gust
Institution:1.Center for Plant Molecular Biology; Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen; Tübingen, Germany;2.Department of Genetics; University of Wisconsin; Madison, WI USA
Abstract:Autophagy has an important function in cellular homeostasis. In recent years autophagy has been implicated in plant basal immunity and assigned negative (“anti-death”) and positive (“pro-death”) regulatory functions in controlling cell death programs that establish sufficient immunity to microbial infection. We recently showed that Arabidopsis mutants lacking the autophagy-associated (ATG) genes ATG5, ATG10 and ATG18a are compromised in their resistance towards infection with necrotrophic fungal pathogens but display an enhanced resistance towards biotrophic bacterial invaders. Thus, the function of autophagy as either being pro-death or anti-death depends critically on the lifestyle and infection strategy of invading microbes. Here we show that ATG7 contributes to resistance to fungal pathogens. Genetic inactivation of ATG7 results in elevated susceptibility towards the necrotrophic fungal pathogen, Alternaria brassicicola, with atg7 mutants developing spreading necrosis accompanied by production of reactive oxygen intermediates. Likewise, treatment with the fungal toxin fumonisin B1 causes spreading lesion formation in the atg7 mutant. We conclude that ATG7-dependent autophagy constitutes an “anti-death” (“pro-survival”) plant mechanism to control the containment of cell death and immunity to necrophic fungal infection.Key words: autophagy, ATG7, basal immunity, fungal resistance, arabidopsisPlants have evolved a bipartite plant immune system to cope with microbial infections. The first layer of defense relies on the recognition of pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMP) by pattern-recognition receptors (PAMP-triggered immunity, PTI).1,2 To overcome this defense strategy, successful pathogens deliver so-called effector proteins into plant cells to modify host cellular processes and to suppress immune responses to enhance virulence. The presence or activities of these microbial effectors is sensed by plant resistance proteins and triggers the second layer of defense, the effector-triggered immunity (ETI).1,2 In contrast to PTI, ETI is most often accompanied by programmed host cell death (PCD) at the site of attempted microbial invasion; however the molecular basis of this apoptosis-like hypersensitive response (HR) is largely unknown.In recent years evidence accumulated that a non-apoptotic form of cell death called autophagy is not only involved in animal PCD and innate immunity3 but is also an important component in the plant basal immune response.4 Generally, autophagy (auto, meaning “self” and phagy, “to eat”) is a cytoplasmic bulk degradation process in which cellular components are targeted to lysosomal or vacuolar degradation. This process is ubiquitous in eukaryotic organisms and is considered to aid cellular survival, differentiation, development and homeostasis by nutrient recycling or removal of damaged or toxic materials.57
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