Abstract

Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling is required for plant cell death responses to invading microbial pathogens. Iron- and reactive oxygen species (ROS)-dependent ferroptotic cell death occurs in rice (Oryza sativa) during an incompatible rice–Magnaporthe oryzae interaction. Here, we show that rice MAP kinase (OsMEK2 and OsMPK1) signaling cascades are involved in iron- and ROS-dependent ferroptotic cell death responses of rice to M. oryzae infection using OsMEK2 knock-out mutant and OsMEK2 and OsMPK1 overexpression rice plants. The OsMPK1:GFP and OsWRKY90:GFP transcription factor were localized to the nuclei, suggesting that OsMPK1 in the cytoplasm moves into the nuclei to interact with the WRKY90. M. oryzae infection in ΔOsmek2 knock-out plants did not trigger iron and ROS accumulation and lipid peroxidation, and also downregulated OsMPK1, OsWRKY90, OsRbohB, and OsPR-1b expression. However, 35S:OsMEK2 overexpression induced ROS- and iron-dependent cell death in rice. The downstream MAP kinase (OsMPK1) overexpression induced ROS- and iron-dependent ferroptotic cell death response to virulent M. oryzae infection. The small-molecule ferroptosis inhibitor ferrostatin-1 suppressed iron- and ROS-dependent ferroptotic cell death in 35S:OsMPK1 overexpression plants. However, the small-molecule inducer erastin triggered iron- and lipid ROS-dependent, but OsMEK2-independent, ferroptotic cell death during M. oryzae infection. Disease (susceptibility)-related cell death was lipid ROS-dependent, but iron-independent in the ΔOsmek2 knock-out mutant during the late M. oryzae infection stage. These combined results suggest that OsMEK2 and OsMPK1 expression positively regulates iron- and ROS-dependent ferroptotic cell death, and blast disease (susceptibility)-related cell death was ROS-dependent but iron-independent in rice–M. oryzae interactions.

Highlights

  • Plants have evolved effective innate immune system responses to avert the invasion of microbial pathogens in their natural habitat (Dodds and Rathjen, 2010; Schwessinger and Ronald, 2012; Fu and Dong, 2013)

  • Based on the sequence alignment data of rice mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) kinase (MAPKK), OsMEK2 was selected to investigate whether rice MAPKKs are required for ferroptotic cell death signaling in this study

  • The OsWRKY90:green fluorescent protein (GFP) transcription factor was located inside the nuclei, but not in the cytoplasm. These results indicate that OsMEK2 interacts with OsMPK1 in the cytoplasm, and OsMPK1 moves into the nuclei to interact with the OsWRK90 transcription factor

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Plants have evolved effective innate immune system responses to avert the invasion of microbial pathogens in their natural habitat (Dodds and Rathjen, 2010; Schwessinger and Ronald, 2012; Fu and Dong, 2013). Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase (MAPK) signaling pathways have pivotal roles in plant defense, immunity, and hypersensitive cell death responses to pathogen attack (Ishihama et al, 2011; Meng and Zhang, 2013; Thulasi Devendrakumar et al, 2018). A previous study showed that Arabidopsis innate immune responses are mediated by a MAP kinase signaling cascade (MEKK1, MKK4/MKK5, and MPK3/MPK6) and WRKY22/WRKY29 transcription factors (Asai et al, 2002). Pathogen-responsive MAPK cascades (MEKK1-MKK4/MKK5MPK3/MPK6 and MEKK1-MKK1/2-MPK4) have pivotal roles in defense signaling against pathogen attack in Arabidopsis thaliana (Pitzschke et al, 2009; Rasmussen et al, 2012; Meng and Zhang, 2013). Silencing of MEK2 (SlMKK2), SlMPK2, and SlMKK4 in tomato disrupted the resistance to infection by Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria (Xcv) and Botrytis cinerea (Melech-Bonfil and Sessa, 2011; Li et al, 2014)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.