Abstract

Active plant immune response involving programmed cell death called the hypersensitive response (HR) is elicited by microbial effectors delivered through the type III secretion system (T3SS). The marine bacterium <i>Hahella chejuensis</i> contains two T3SSs that are similar to those of animal pathogens, but it was able to elicit HR-like cell death in the land plant <i>Nicotiana benthamiana</i>. The cell death was comparable with the transcriptional patterns of <i>H. chejuensis</i> T3SS-1 genes, was mediated by SGT1, a general regulator of plant resistance, and was suppressed by AvrPto1, a type III-secreted effector of a plant pathogen that inhibits HR. Thus, type III-secreted effectors of a marine bacterium are capable of inducing the nonhost HR in a land plant it has never encountered before. This suggests that plants may have evolved to cope with a potential threat posed by alien pathogen effectors. Our work documents an exceptional case of nonhost HR and provides an expanded perspective for studying plant nonhost resistance.

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