Eukaryotic mRNAs frequently contain upstream open reading frames (uORFs), encoding small peptides which may control translation of the main ORF (mORF) by various mechanisms. Here we report the identification of a bicistronic transcript in Arabidopsis, in which the uORF encodes an ortholog of the cell cycle regulator CDC26 whose genome locus was previously unknown. AtCDC26 is part of the plant anaphase promoting complex / cyclosome (APC/C), regulates accumulation of APC/C target proteins and controls cell division, growth and embryo development. AtCDC26 is translated together with the inorganic polyphosphatase AtTTM3 from a single transcript conserved in the plant lineage. While there is no apparent biochemical or physiological connection between the two gene products, concerted AtCDC26 and AtTTM3 transcription and translation occurs in different plant tissues and organs. Our work reveals that uORFs in plants may code for functional proteins not involved in the translational regulation of the mORF.
Recent research suggested that plants behave differently under combined versus single abiotic and biotic stress conditions in controlled environments. While this work has provided a glimpse into how plants might behave under complex natural conditions, it also highlights the need for field experiments using established model systems. In nature, diverse microbes colonize the phyllosphere of Arabidopsis thaliana, including the obligate biotroph oomycete genus Albugo, causal agent of the common disease white rust. Biotrophic, as well as hemibiotrophic plant pathogens are characterized by efficient suppression of host defense responses. Lab experiments have even shown that Albugo sp. can suppress non-host resistance, thereby enabling otherwise avirulent pathogen growth. We asked how a pathogen that is vitally dependent on a living host can compete in nature for limited niche space while paradoxically enabling colonization of its host plant for competitors? To address this question, we used a proteomics approach to identify differences and similarities between lab and field samples of Albugo sp.-infected and -uninfected A. thaliana plants. We could identify highly similar apoplastic proteomic profiles in both infected and uninfected plants. In wild plants, however, a broad range of defense-related proteins were detected in the apoplast regardless of infection status, while no or low levels of defense-related proteins were detected in lab samples. These results indicate that Albugo sp. do not strongly affect immune responses and leave distinct branches of the immune signaling network intact. To validate our findings and to get mechanistic insights, we tested a panel of A. thaliana mutant plants with induced or compromised immunity for susceptibility to different biotrophic pathogens. Our findings suggest that the biotroph pathogen Albugo selectively interferes with host defense under different environmental and competitive pressures to maintain its ecological niche dominance. Adaptation to host immune responses while maintaining a partially active host immunity seems advantageous against competitors. We suggest a model for future research that considers not only host–microbe but in addition microbe–microbe and microbe–host environment factors.
Utilizing plant microbiota to promote plant growth and plant health is key to more environmentally friendly agriculture. A major bottleneck in the engineering of plant-beneficial microbial communities is the low persistence of applied microbes under filed conditions, especially considering plant leaves.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.