A novel membrane fusion-mediated plant immunity against bacterial pathogens

  1. Noriyuki Hatsugai1,2,
  2. Shinji Iwasaki1,3,
  3. Kentaro Tamura1,3,
  4. Maki Kondo4,
  5. Kentaro Fuji1,3,
  6. Kimi Ogasawara4,5,
  7. Mikio Nishimura4,5 and
  8. Ikuko Hara-Nishimura1,3,6
  1. 1Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan;
  2. 2PREST, Japan Science and Technology Agency, Kawaguchi, Saitama 332-0012, Japan;
  3. 3CREST, Japan Science and Technology Agency, Kawaguchi, Saitama 332-0012, Japan;
  4. 4Department of Cell Biology, National Institute for Basic Biology, Okazaki 444-8585, Japan;
  5. 5School of Life Science, Graduate University for Advanced Studies, Okazaki 444-8585, Japan

    Abstract

    Plants have developed their own defense strategies because they have no immune cells. A common plant defense strategy involves programmed cell death (PCD) at the infection site, but how the PCD-associated cell-autonomous immunity is executed in plants is not fully understood. Here we provide a novel mechanism underlying cell-autonomous immunity, which involves the fusion of membranes of a large central vacuole with the plasma membrane, resulting in the discharge of vacuolar antibacterial proteins to the outside of the cells, where bacteria proliferate. The extracellular fluid that was discharged from the vacuoles of infected leaves had both antibacterial activity and cell death-inducing activity. We found that a defect in proteasome function abolished the membrane fusion associated with both disease resistance and PCD in response to avirulent bacterial strains but not to a virulent strain. Furthermore, RNAi plants with a defective proteasome subunit PBA1 have reduced DEVDase activity, which is an activity associated with caspase-3, one of the executors of animal apoptosis. The plant counterpart of caspase-3 has not yet been identified. Our results suggest that PBA1 acts as a plant caspase-3-like enzyme. Thus, this novel defense strategy through proteasome-regulating membrane fusion of the vacuolar and plasma membranes provides plants with a mechanism for attacking intercellular bacterial pathogens.

    Keywords

    Footnotes

    Related Article

    | Table of Contents

    Life Science Alliance