RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 The Hyaloperanospora arabidopsidis effector HaRxL77 is hypermobile between cells and manipulates host defence JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 2022.01.24.477405 DO 10.1101/2022.01.24.477405 A1 Liu, Xiaokun A1 Bellandi, Annalisa A1 Johnston, Matthew G. A1 Faulkner, Christine YR 2022 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/01/24/2022.01.24.477405.abstract AB Multicellular organisms require dynamic communication between cells, tissues and organs to integrate responses to external and internal signals. In plants, cell-to-cell communication relies in part on plasmodesmata, which connect adjacent cells and allow the exchange of signals and resources. Upon infection by pathogens, plants act to isolate infected cells from non-infected cells by closing plasmodesmata but pathogens can suppress this defence and maintain plasmodesmata in an open state. To address the question of what a pathogen might gain from keeping plasmodesmata open, we screened effectors from the biotrophic Arabidopsis pathogen Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis (Hpa) for the ability to move cell-to-cell via plasmodesmata in plant tissues. We quantified the mobility of cytoplasmic effectors and identified six that were hypermobile, i.e., can move further than expected for a protein of that size. Of these, HaRxL77 indirectly modifies plasmodesmatal permeability to facilitate hypermobility and suppresses the flg22-induced ROS burst, suggesting that cell-to-cell mobility of effectors allows defence manipulation ahead of the infection front. Thus, this study provides novel insights into how Hpa exploits plasmodesmata-mediated intercellular connectivity to promote infection, characterising a poorly explored element of plant-pathogen interaction.Author Summary During infection, pathogens secrete effectors into host cells to manipulate them for their benefit. Plant cells are connected via plasmodesmata, and pathogen effectors can use these connections to reach uninfected cells. We asked what a pathogen might gain by having effectors that can travel between cells and thus screened Arabidopsis downy mildew effectors for this capability. We found downy mildew produces many cell-to-cell mobile effectors, and that some of these can move further than we might expect. One ‘hypermobile’ effector, HaRxL77, can open plasmodesmata to allow this increased mobility, although how it does this is not clear. HaRxL77 interferes with several host defence mechanisms, suggesting that cell- to-cell mobility allows effectors to perturb host defence ahead of the infection front.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.