From the Shauna Somerville Lab, June 2006
A Novel Form of Resistance Prevents Pathogen Entry into Plant Cells
A majority of host plants are resistant to the majority of pathogens encountered in their environment
whether these are wind or rain borne spores that land on leaves or soil microbes happened upon by
plant roots. Grape vines are not susceptible to the powdery mildew spores from diseased mustard
plants in a neighboring field for example. The underlying mechanisms of this form of disease
resistance have traditionally been little studied. The Paul Schulze-Lefert lab, Hans Thordal-
Christensen lab and our lab, working collaboratively, identified mutants of the model plant
Arabidopsis thaliana that were partially compromised in their resistance to the powdery mildew
fungus, Blumeria graminis f. sp. hordei, which is normally a pathogen of barley. To date,
several genes that had not previously been implicated in plant defenses have been identified by this
approach.
PEN3 encodes an ABC transporter of the pleiotropic drug resistance class (PDR8) (Stein et al.
2006). The phenotype of the pen3 mutants is illustrated below (left panel). The pen3
mutants allow the barley powdery mildew colonies to grow to a limited extent, producing longer
and more branched hyphae, than on they do on wild-type plants. This enhanced growth is dependent
on the establishment of feeding structures in epidermal cells that can draw nutrients from the host
cells to support hyphal growth. In healthy, uninfected cells, the PEN3 protein appears uniformly
distributed in the plasma membrane. A notable feature of the PEN3 protein is that it accumulates in a
ring-like halo in the plasma membrane and in collar-like structures surrounding the fungal penetration
peg as it attempts to enter a plant epidermal cell (middle panel). This pathogen-induced accumulation
of the PEN3 protein suggests that the plant is able to sense the location of fungal penetration very
precisely and mobilize resources to this site. Although the specific compounds exported or imported
by the PEN3 transporter are unknown at present, it seems likely that PEN3 exports anti-microbial
compounds to the cell wall space to prevent pathogen entry into host cells (right panel).
Left Panel: Growth of the barley powdery mildew fungus on wild type (Wt) Arabidopsis and on pen3, eds1 and
pen3 eds1 mutant plants at 10 days after inoculation. Fungal structures including conidia (C) and hyphae (h) are stained
blue (From Stein et al. 2006). Middle Panel: Localization of PEN3-GFP to the plasma membrane (pm) and to a halo
surrounding the fungal penetration peg (p). The powdery mildew fungal structures are stained to give red fluorescence and
PEN3-GFP fluoresces in green (From Stein et al. 2006). Right Panel: Our current model is that the PEN3 transporter (green
ovals) exports anti-microbial compounds (blue triangles) to the cell wall (grey), where they poison the fungal penetration peg
and limit pathogen ingress into epidermal cells. Fungal structures, including the conidium (C), are in red.
Two other genes that limit fungal ingress are PEN1, which encodes a syntaxin (SYP121), and
PEN2 encoding a glycosyl hydrolase (Collins et al. 2003, Lipka et al. 2005). PEN2 may play a role in
the synthesis of anti-microbial compounds, while the PEN1 syntaxin may contribute to vesicle-
mediated secretion of materials to reinforce the cell wall. A third plant gene influencing the ability of
powdery mildew fungi to penetrate across the cell wall is MLO, which acts as a negative regulator of
penetration defenses (Consonni et al. 2006). The MLO gene was originally identified in barley
and mlo mutations have been widely incorporated into commercial cultivars, providing durable,
broad-spectrum resistance to powdery mildew over the past 30 years.
A number of plant genes have been identified that contribute basal disease resistance, the residual
resistance to pathogens observed in generally susceptible hosts. One of these genes is EDS1, which
encodes a lipase-like protein although it does not exhibit lipase enzymatic activity (Wiermer et al.
2005). eds1 mutants are somewhat compromised in their resistance to the barley powdery mildew
(right panel) and double mutants with pen3 support significantly enhanced growth of the barley
powdery mildew. Our collaborators have shown that Erysiphe pisi, the powdery mildew of pea,
grows even better than the barley powdery mildew and is able to asexually reproduce on the
pen2 eds1 double mutant (Lipka et al. 2005). These results suggest that some of the known
defenses, like EDS1-mediated defenses, also contribute to Arabidopsis resistance to inappropriate
pathogens, like the barley and pea powdery mildews. They also highlight the differing extent that
various inappropriate pathogens are constrained by Arabidopsis penetration defenses.
Collectively, these results suggest that plants mount effective, broad spectrum defenses designed to
block pathogen penetration across the cell wall and entry into host cells. Over evolutionary time,
virulent powdery mildew species, such as Golovinomyces cichoracearum, which causes
disease on Arabidopsis, must presumably have acquired the ability to avoid these defenses by stealth
or to be insensitive to them.
References
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Collins, N., Thordal-Christensen, H., Lipka, V., Bau, S., Kombrink, E., Stein, M., Hückelhoven, R.,
Somerville, S., Schulze-Lefert, P. (2003) Conserved SNARE secretion machinery components
mediate cell wall penetration resistance against powdery mildew plant pathogens. Nature 425,
973-977.
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Consonni, C., Humphry, M.E., Hartmann, H.A., Livaja, M., Durner, J., Westphal, L., Vogel, J., Lipka,
V., Kemmerling, B. Schulze-Lefert, P., Somerville, S.C., Panstruga, R. (2006) Conserved requirement
for a plant host cell protein in powdery mildew pathogenesis. Nature Genetics 38, 716-720.
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Lipka, V., Dittgen, J., Bednarek, P., Bhat, R., Wiemer, M., Stein, M., Landtag, J., Brandt, W., Rosahl,
S., Scheel, D., Llorente, F., Molina, A., Parker, J., Somerville, S., Schulze-Lefert, P. (2005) Pre- and
post-invasion defenses both contribute to nonhost resistance in Arabidopsis. Science 310,
1180-1183.
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Stein, M., Dittgen, J., Sánchez-Rodriguez, C., Hou, B.-H., Molina, A., Schulze-Lefert, P., Lipka, V.,
Somerville, S. (2006) Arabidopsis PEN3/PDR8, an ATP binding cassette transporter,
contributes to nonhost resistance to inappropriate pathogens that enter by direct penetration. The
Plant Cell 18, 731-746. [[pdf]
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Wiermer, M., Feys, B.J., Parker, J.E. 2005. Plant immunity: the EDS1 regulatory role. Current
Opinion in Plant Biology 8, 383-389.
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