Department of Plant Pathology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2013;9(4):e1003287. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1003287. Epub 2013 Apr 11.
Programmed cell death is characterized by a cascade of tightly controlled events that culminate in the orchestrated death of the cell. In multicellular organisms autophagy and apoptosis are recognized as two principal means by which these genetically determined cell deaths occur. During plant-microbe interactions cell death programs can mediate both resistant and susceptible events. Via oxalic acid (OA), the necrotrophic phytopathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum hijacks host pathways and induces cell death in host plant tissue resulting in hallmark apoptotic features in a time and dose dependent manner. OA-deficient mutants are non-pathogenic and trigger a restricted cell death phenotype in the host that unexpectedly exhibits markers associated with the plant hypersensitive response including callose deposition and a pronounced oxidative burst, suggesting the plant can recognize and in this case respond, defensively. The details of this plant directed restrictive cell death associated with OA deficient mutants is the focus of this work. Using a combination of electron and fluorescence microscopy, chemical effectors and reverse genetics, we show that this restricted cell death is autophagic. Inhibition of autophagy rescued the non-pathogenic mutant phenotype. These findings indicate that autophagy is a defense response in this necrotrophic fungus/plant interaction and suggest a novel function associated with OA; namely, the suppression of autophagy. These data suggest that not all cell deaths are equivalent, and though programmed cell death occurs in both situations, the outcome is predicated on who is in control of the cell death machinery. Based on our data, we suggest that it is not cell death per se that dictates the outcome of certain plant-microbe interactions, but the manner by which cell death occurs that is crucial.
程序性细胞死亡的特征是一系列紧密控制的事件,最终导致细胞的有序死亡。在多细胞生物中,自噬和细胞凋亡被认为是这些基因决定的细胞死亡发生的两种主要方式。在植物-微生物相互作用中,细胞死亡程序可以介导抗性和易感性事件。通过草酸(OA),坏死型植物病原菌核盘菌劫持宿主途径,并诱导宿主植物组织中的细胞死亡,导致标志性的凋亡特征,具有时间和剂量依赖性。OA 缺陷突变体是非致病性的,并在宿主中引发受限的细胞死亡表型,出乎意料地表现出与植物过敏反应相关的标记物,包括胼胝质沉积和明显的氧化爆发,表明植物可以识别并在这种情况下做出防御性反应。这项工作的重点是研究与 OA 缺陷突变体相关的这种植物定向的受限细胞死亡。我们使用电子和荧光显微镜、化学效应物和反向遗传学的组合,表明这种受限的细胞死亡是自噬的。自噬的抑制挽救了非致病性突变体的表型。这些发现表明,自噬是这种坏死型真菌/植物相互作用中的一种防御反应,并表明 OA 具有一种新的功能;即,抑制自噬。这些数据表明,并非所有的细胞死亡都是等效的,尽管程序性细胞死亡发生在两种情况下,但结果取决于谁控制细胞死亡机制。基于我们的数据,我们认为,决定某些植物-微生物相互作用结果的不是细胞死亡本身,而是细胞死亡发生的方式至关重要。