%0 Journal Article %A Aifang Ma %A Dingpeng Zhang %A Guangxing Wang %A Kai Wang %A Zhen Li %A Yuanhui Gao %A Hengchang Li %A Chao Bian %A Jinkui Cheng %A Yinan Han %A Shuhua Yang %A Zhizhong Gong %A Junsheng Qi %T Verticillium dahliae effector VDAL protects MYB6 from degradation by interacting with PUB25/26 E3 ligases for enhancing Verticillium wilt resistance in Arabidopsis %D 2021 %R 10.1101/2021.03.26.437179 %J bioRxiv %P 2021.03.26.437179 %X Verticillium wilt is a severe plant disease that causes massive losses in multiple crops. Increasing the plant resistance to Verticillium wilt is a critical challenge worldwide. Here, we report that the hemibiotrophic Verticillium dahliae (V. dahliae)-secreted Asp f2-like protein VDAL causes leaf wilting when applied to cotton leaves in vitro, but enhances the resistance to V. dahliae when overexpressed in Arabidopsis or cotton without affecting the plant growth and development. VDAL protein interacts with Arabidopsis E3 ligases PUB25 and PUB26 (PUBs) and is ubiquitinated by PUBs in vitro. However, VDAL is not degraded by PUB25 or PUB26 in planta. Besides, the pub25 pub26 double mutant shows higher resistance to V. dahliae than the wild type. PUBs interact with the transcription factor MYB6 in a yeast two-hybrid screen. MYB6 promotes plant resistance to Verticillium wilt while PUBs ubiquitinate MYB6 and mediate its degradation. VDAL competes with MYB6 for binding to PUBs, and the role of VDAL in increasing Verticillium wilt resistance depends on MYB6. Taken together, these results suggest that plants evolute a strategy to utilize the invaded effector protein VDAL to resist the V. dahliae infection without causing a hypersensitive response (HR), Alternatively, in order to take nutrients from host cells, hemibiotrophic pathogens may use some effectors to keep plant cells alive during its infection in order to take nutrients from host cells. This study provides the molecular mechanism for plants increasing disease resistance when overexpressing some effector proteins without inducing HR, and may promote searching for more genes from pathogenic fungi or bacteria to engineer plant disease resistance.One-sentence summary Ectopically expressed VDAL in Arabidopsis alleviates the degradation of a positive disease response factor MYB6 through its interaction with PUB25/26 E3 ligases. %U https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2021/03/28/2021.03.26.437179.full.pdf