Despite an ever-increasing interest for the use of pectin-derived oligogalacturonides (OGs) as biological control agents in agriculture, very little information exists—mainly for technical reasons—on the nature and activity of the OGs that accumulate during pathogen infection. Here we developed a sensitive OG profiling method, which revealed unsuspected features of the OGs generated during infection of Arabidopsis thaliana with the fungus Botrytis cinerea. Indeed, in contrast to previous reports, most OGs were acetyl- and methylesterified, and 80% of them were produced by fungal pectin lyases, not by polygalacturonases. Polygalacturonase products did not accumulate as larger size OGs but were converted into oxidized GalA dimers. Finally, the comparison of the OGs and transcriptomes of leaves infected with B. cinerea mutants with reduced pectinolytic activity but with decreased or increased virulence, respectively, identified candidate OG elicitors. In conclusion, OG analysis provides insights into the enzymatic arms race between plant and pathogen and facilitates the identification of defense elicitors.
SUMMARY
Plant cell wall remodeling plays a key role in the control of cell elongation and differentiation. In particular, fine‐tuning of the degree of methylesterification of pectins was previously reported to control developmental processes as diverse as pollen germination, pollen tube elongation, emergence of primordia or elongation of dark‐grown hypocotyls. However, how pectin degradation can modulate plant development has remained elusive. Here we report the characterization of a polygalacturonase (PG), AtPGLR, the gene for which is highly expressed at the onset of lateral root emergence in Arabidopsis. Due to gene compensation mechanisms, mutant approaches failed to determine the involvement of AtPGLR in plant growth. To overcome this issue, AtPGLR has been expressed heterologously in the yeast Pichia pastoris and biochemically characterized. We showed that AtPGLR is an endo‐PG that preferentially releases non‐methylesterified oligogalacturonides with a short degree of polymerization (< 8) at acidic pH. The application of the purified recombinant protein on Amaryllis pollen tubes, an excellent model for studying cell wall remodeling at acidic pH, induced abnormal pollen tubes or cytoplasmic leakage in the subapical dome of the pollen tube tip, where non‐methylesterified pectin epitopes are detected. Those leaks could either be repaired by new β‐glucan deposits (mostly callose) in the cell wall or promoted dramatic burst of the pollen tube. Our work presents the full biochemical characterization of an Arabidopsis PG and highlights the importance of pectin integrity in pollen tube elongation.
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