作者
Haicheng Liao,Yu Fang,Junjie Yin,Min He,Yingjie Wei,Juan Zhang,Shuang Yong,Joo Young,Li Song,Xiaobo Zhu,Xixi Chen,Ján Kováč,Qingqing Hou,Zhaotang Ma,Xiaogang Zhou,Lin Chen,Emi Yumoto,Tian Yang,Qi Yu He,Jian Li,Yixin Deng,Haoxuan Li,Mingwu Li,Hai Qing,Lijuan Zou,Yu Bi,Jiali Liu,Yihua Yang,Daihua Ye,Tao Qi,Long Wang,Qing Xiong,Xiang Lu,Yongyan Tang,Ting Li,Bingtian Ma,Peng Qin,Yan Li,Wenming Wang,Yangwen Qian,Jaroslav Ďurkovič,Koji Miyamoto,Mawsheng Chern,Shigui Li,Weitao Li,Jing Wang,Xuewei Chen
摘要
Abstract Hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) is a ubiquitous signal regulating many biological processes, including innate immunity, in all eukaryotes. However, it remains largely unknown that how transcription factors directly sense H 2 O 2 in eukaryotes. Here, we report that rice basic/helix-loop-helix transcription factor bHLH25 directly senses H 2 O 2 to confer resistance to multiple diseases caused by fungi or bacteria. Upon pathogen attack, rice plants increase the production of H 2 O 2 , which directly oxidizes bHLH25 at methionine 256 in the nucleus. Oxidized bHLH25 represses miR397b expression to activate lignin biosynthesis for plant cell wall reinforcement, preventing pathogens from penetrating plant cells. Lignin biosynthesis consumes H 2 O 2 causing accumulation of non-oxidized bHLH25. Non-oxidized bHLH25 switches to promote the expression of Copalyl Diphosphate Synthase 2 ( CPS2 ), which increases phytoalexin biosynthesis to inhibit expansion of pathogens that escape into plants. This oxidization/non-oxidation status change of bHLH25 allows plants to maintain H 2 O 2 , lignin and phytoalexin at optimized levels to effectively fight against pathogens and prevents these three molecules from over-accumulation that harms plants. Thus, our discovery reveals a novel mechanism by which a single protein promotes two independent defense pathways against pathogens. Importantly, the bHLH25 orthologues from available plant genomes all contain a conserved M256-like methionine suggesting the broad existence of this mechanism in the plant kingdom. Moreover, this Met-oxidation mechanism may also be employed by other eukaryotic transcription factors to sense H 2 O 2 to change functions.