Alternative splicing of a potato disease resistance gene maintains homeostasis between growth and immunity

Author:

Sun Biying1ORCID,Huang Jie12ORCID,Kong Liang1ORCID,Gao Chuyun1ORCID,Zhao Fei1ORCID,Shen Jiayong1ORCID,Wang Tian1ORCID,Li Kangping1ORCID,Wang Luyao13ORCID,Wang Yuanchao1ORCID,Halterman Dennis A45ORCID,Dong Suomeng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Pathology, The Key Laboratory of Integrated Management of Crop Diseases and Pests, Ministry of Education, the Key Laboratory of Plant Immunity, Sanya Institute of Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing Agricultural University , Nanjing 210095 , China

2. Plant Chemetics Laboratory, Department of Biology, University of Oxford , Oxford OX1 3RB , UK

3. Guangdong Laboratory of Lingnan Modern Agriculture, Genome Analysis Laboratory of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences , Shenzhen Branch, Shenzhen, Guangdong 518120 , China

4. Department of Plant Pathology, University of Wisconsin-Madison , Madison, WI 53706 , USA

5. US Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, Vegetable Crops Research Unit , Madison, WI 53706-1514 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Plants possess a robust and sophisticated innate immune system against pathogens and must balance growth with rapid pathogen detection and defense. The intracellular receptors with nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat (NLR) motifs recognize pathogen-derived effector proteins and thereby trigger the immune response. The expression of genes encoding NLR receptors is precisely controlled in multifaceted ways. The alternative splicing (AS) of introns in response to infection is recurrently observed but poorly understood. Here we report that the potato (Solanum tuberosum) NLR gene RB undergoes AS of its intron, resulting in 2 transcriptional isoforms, which coordinately regulate plant immunity and growth homeostasis. During normal growth, RB predominantly exists as an intron-retained isoform RB_IR, encoding a truncated protein containing only the N-terminus of the NLR. Upon late blight infection, the pathogen induces intron splicing of RB, increasing the abundance of RB_CDS, which encodes a full-length and active R protein. By deploying the RB splicing isoforms fused with a luciferase reporter system, we identified IPI-O1 (also known as Avrblb1), the RB cognate effector, as a facilitator of RB AS. IPI-O1 directly interacts with potato splicing factor StCWC15, resulting in altered localization of StCWC15 from the nucleoplasm to the nucleolus and nuclear speckles. Mutations in IPI-O1 that eliminate StCWC15 binding also disrupt StCWC15 re-localization and RB intron splicing. Thus, our study reveals that StCWC15 serves as a surveillance facilitator that senses the pathogen-secreted effector and regulates the trade-off between RB-mediated plant immunity and growth, expanding our understanding of molecular plant–microbe interactions.

Funder

Chinese National Science Funds Grants

Guangdong Major Project of Basic and Applied Basic Research

Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences

China Agriculture Research System-Potato

United States Department of Agriculture

USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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