TY - JOUR
T1 - Pathogen Trojan horse delivers bioactive host protein to alter maize anther cell behavior in situ
AU - van der Linde, Karina
AU - Timofejeva, Ljudmilla
AU - Egger, Rachel L.
AU - Ilau, Birger
AU - Hammond, Reza
AU - Teng, Chong
AU - Meyers, Blake C.
AU - Doehlemann, Gunther
AU - Walbot, Virginia
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (Award IOS13-39229). K.v.d.L. was supported by the National Academy of Sciences-Leopoldina (Germany). L.T. and B.I. were supported by Grant IUT19-3 from the Estonian Ministry of Education and Research. We thank Darren Morrow, Sidae Lee, Jorgen Holm, Mary Beth Mudgett, Heather Cartwright, and the Carnegie Department of Plant Biology Imaging facility for advice and technical support. Vectors pGBKT7gw and pGADT7gw, and S. cerevisiae strain AH109 were a kind gift from Mary Beth Mudgett and Jung-Gun Kim.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 ASPB.
PY - 2018/3
Y1 - 2018/3
N2 - Small proteins are crucial signals during development, host defense, and physiology. The highly spatiotemporal restricted functions of signaling proteins remain challenging to study in planta. The several month span required to assess transgene expression, particularly in flowers, combined with the uncertainties from transgene position effects and ubiquitous or overexpression, makes monitoring of spatiotemporally restricted signaling proteins lengthy and difficult. This situation could be rectified with a transient assay in which protein deployment is tightly controlled spatially and temporally in planta to assess protein functions, timing, and cellular targets as well as to facilitate rapid mutagenesis to define functional protein domains. In maize (Zea mays), secreted ZmMAC1 (MULTIPLE ARCHESPORIAL CELLS1) was proposed to trigger somatic niche formation during anther development by participating in a ligand-receptor module. Inspired by Homer’s Trojan horse myth, we engineered a protein delivery system that exploits the secretory capabilities of the maize smut fungus Ustilago maydis, to allow protein delivery to individual cells in certain cell layers at precise time points. Pathogen-supplied ZmMAC1 cell-autonomously corrected both somatic cell division and differentiation defects in mutant Zmmac1-1 anthers. These results suggest that exploiting host-pathogen interactions may become a generally useful method for targeting host proteins to cell and tissue types to clarify cellular autonomy and to analyze steps in cell responses.
AB - Small proteins are crucial signals during development, host defense, and physiology. The highly spatiotemporal restricted functions of signaling proteins remain challenging to study in planta. The several month span required to assess transgene expression, particularly in flowers, combined with the uncertainties from transgene position effects and ubiquitous or overexpression, makes monitoring of spatiotemporally restricted signaling proteins lengthy and difficult. This situation could be rectified with a transient assay in which protein deployment is tightly controlled spatially and temporally in planta to assess protein functions, timing, and cellular targets as well as to facilitate rapid mutagenesis to define functional protein domains. In maize (Zea mays), secreted ZmMAC1 (MULTIPLE ARCHESPORIAL CELLS1) was proposed to trigger somatic niche formation during anther development by participating in a ligand-receptor module. Inspired by Homer’s Trojan horse myth, we engineered a protein delivery system that exploits the secretory capabilities of the maize smut fungus Ustilago maydis, to allow protein delivery to individual cells in certain cell layers at precise time points. Pathogen-supplied ZmMAC1 cell-autonomously corrected both somatic cell division and differentiation defects in mutant Zmmac1-1 anthers. These results suggest that exploiting host-pathogen interactions may become a generally useful method for targeting host proteins to cell and tissue types to clarify cellular autonomy and to analyze steps in cell responses.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85043272863&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1105/tpc.17.00238
DO - 10.1105/tpc.17.00238
M3 - Article
C2 - 29449414
AN - SCOPUS:85043272863
SN - 1040-4651
VL - 30
SP - 528
EP - 542
JO - Plant Cell
JF - Plant Cell
IS - 3
ER -