Abstract

Pyricularia oryzae is the pathogen for rice blast disease, which is a devastating threat to rice production worldwide. Lysine succinylation, a newly identified post-translational modification, is associated with various cellular processes. Here, liquid chromatography tandem-mass spectrometry combined with a high-efficiency succinyl-lysine antibody was used to identify the succinylated peptides in P. oryzae. In total, 2109 lysine succinylation sites in 714 proteins were identified. Ten conserved succinylation sequence patterns were identified, among which, K*******Ksuc, and K**Ksuc, were two most preferred ones. The frequency of lysine succinylation sites, however, greatly varied among organisms, including plants, animals, and microbes. Interestingly, the numbers of succinylation site in each protein of P. oryzae were significantly greater than that of most previous published organisms. Gene ontology and KEGG analysis showed that these succinylated peptides are associated with a wide range of cellular functions, from metabolic processes to stimuli responses. Further analyses determined that lysine succinylation occurs on several key enzymes of the tricarboxylic acid cycle and glycolysis pathway, indicating that succinylation may play important roles in the regulation of basal metabolism in P. oryzae. Furthermore, more than 40 pathogenicity-related proteins were identified as succinylated proteins, suggesting an involvement of succinylation in pathogenicity. Our results provide the first comprehensive view of the P. oryzae succinylome and may aid to find potential pathogenicity-related proteins to control the rice blast disease. Significance Plant pathogens represent a great threat to world food security, and enormous reduction in the global yield of rice was caused by P. oryzae infection. Here, the succinylated proteins in P. oryzae were identified. Furthermore, comparison of succinylation sites among various species, indicating that different degrees of succinylation may be involved in the regulation of basal metabolism. This data facilitates our understanding of the metabolic pathways and proteins that are associated with pathogenicity.

Highlights

  • Protein post-translational modifications (PTMs) are efficient biological mechanisms for expanding the genetic code and regulating complex cellular physiology[1,2]

  • We systematically identified the succinylated proteins in P. oryzae, which may facilitate our understanding of the metabolic pathways and proteins that are associated with pathogenicity

  • To investigate the preferred protein types and metabolic pathways involved in succinylation, we evaluated the gene ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) enrichments of the succinylated proteins in P. oryzae

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Summary

Introduction

Protein post-translational modifications (PTMs) are efficient biological mechanisms for expanding the genetic code and regulating complex cellular physiology[1,2]. In both eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells, PTMs represent an efficient strategy for increasing the functional diversity of a limited number of proteins[3]. Numbers of fungal genes involved in pathogenicity have been identified in P. oryzae[24,25]. Four LIM domain proteins involved in infection-related development and pathogenicity are important regulators of infection-associated morphogenesis in the rice blast fungus[27]. Host-induced gene silencing of three predicted pathogenicity genes, ABC1, MAC1 and PMK1, significantly inhibited the development of rice blast disease[42]

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