Ho Zoon Chae,Eun Kyung Kim,Chang Moo Kang,Joung Kyu Park,Eun Lee,Sang Uk Lee,Yong Hun Chi,Seol Ki Paeng,Su Bin Bae,Seong Dong Wi,Byung-Wook Yun,Woe-Yeon Kim,Dae-Jin Yun,David A. Mackey,Sang Yup Lee
Reactive oxygen signaling regulates numerous biological processes, including stress responses in plants. Redox sensors transduce reactive oxygen signals into cellular responses. Here, we present biochemical evidence that a plant quiescin sulfhydryl oxidase homolog (QSOX1) is a redox sensor that negatively regulates plant immunity against a bacterial pathogen. The expression level of QSOX1 is inversely correlated with pathogen-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation. Interestingly, QSOX1 both senses and regulates ROS levels by interactingn with and mediating redox regulation of S-nitrosoglutathione reductase, which, consistent with previous findings, influences reactive nitrogen-mediated regulation of ROS generation. Collectively, our data indicate that QSOX1 is a redox sensor that negatively regulates plant immunity by linking reactive oxygen and reactive nitrogen signaling to limit ROS production.