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OsNPR3.3-dependent salicylic acid signaling is involved in recessive gene xa5-mediated immunity to rice bacterial blight

Guanghuai Jiang, Dedong Yin, Yue Shi, Zhuangzhi Zhou, Chunrong Li, Pengcheng Liu, Yanfeng Jia, Yanyan Wang, Zhenzhen Liu, Minxiang Yu, Xiànghóng Wú, Wenxue Zhai, Lihuang Zhu

2020Scientific Reports30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Salicylic acid (SA) is a key natural component that mediates local and systemic resistance to pathogens in many dicotyledonous species. However, its function is controversial in disease resistance in rice plants. Here, we show that the SA signaling is involved in both pathogen-associated-molecular-patterns triggered immunity (PTI) and effector triggered immunity (ETI) to Xanthomonas oryzae pv. Oryzae (Xoo) mediated by the recessive gene xa5, in which OsNPR3.3 plays an important role through interacting with TGAL11. Rice plants containing homozygous xa5 gene respond positively to exogenous SA, and their endogenous SA levels are also especially induced upon infection by the Xoo strain, PXO86. Depletion of endogenous SA can significantly attenuate plant resistance to PXO86, even to 86∆HrpXG (mutant PXO86 with a damaged type III secretion system). These results indicated that SA plays an important role in disease resistance in rice plants, which can be clouded by high levels of endogenous SA and the use of particular rice varieties.

Topics & Concepts

Xanthomonas oryzaeBiologyPlant disease resistanceSalicylic acidGeneImmunityXanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzaeEndogenyEffectorMutantPathogenMicrobiologyPlant ImmunityImmune systemImmunologyGeneticsArabidopsisBiochemistryPlant-Microbe Interactions and ImmunityPlant Pathogenic Bacteria StudiesPlant pathogens and resistance mechanisms
OsNPR3.3-dependent salicylic acid signaling is involved in recessive gene xa5-mediated immunity to rice bacterial blight | Litcius