Plants use both cell surface-resident pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) and intracellular nucleotide binding leucine-rich repeat (NLR) receptors to detect various pathogens. Plant PRRs typically recognize conserved pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) to provide broad-spectrum resistance. By contrast, plant NLRs generally detect pathogen strain-specific effectors and confer race-specific resistance. Here, we demonstrate that the tomato () NLR Sw-5b confers broad-spectrum resistance against American-type tospoviruses by recognizing a conserved 21-amino acid peptide region within viral movement protein NSm (NSm). Sw-5b NB-ARC-LRR domains directly associate with NSm in vitro and in planta. Domain swap, site-directed mutagenesis and structure modeling analyses identified four polymorphic sites in the Sw-5b LRR domain that are critical for the recognition of NSm Furthermore, recognition of NSm by Sw-5b likely disturbs the residues adjacent to R927 in the LRR domain to weaken the intramolecular interaction between LRR and NB-ARC domains, thus translating recognition of NSm into activation of Sw-5b. Natural variation analysis of Sw-5b homologs from wild tomato species of South America revealed that the four polymorphic sites in the Sw-5b LRR domain were positively selected during evolution and are all necessary to confer resistance to tospovirus. The results described here provide a new example of a plant NLR mediating broad-spectrum resistance through recognition of a small conserved PAMP-like region within the pathogen effector.
Plant viruses move through plasmodesmata to infect new cells. The plant endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is interconnected among cells via the ER desmotubule in the plasmodesma across the cell wall, forming a continuous ER network throughout the entire plant. This ER continuity is unique to plants and has been postulated to serve as a platform for the intercellular trafficking of macromolecules. In the present study, the contribution of the plant ER membrane transport system to the intercellular trafficking of the NSm movement protein and Tomato spotted wilt tospovirus (TSWV) is investigated. We showed that TSWV NSm is physically associated with the ER membrane in Nicotiana benthamiana plants. An NSm-GFP fusion protein transiently expressed in single leaf cells was trafficked into neighboring cells. Mutations in NSm that impaired its association with the ER or caused its mis-localization to other subcellular sites inhibited cell-to-cell trafficking. Pharmacological disruption of the ER network severely inhibited NSm-GFP trafficking but not GFP diffusion. In the Arabidopsis thaliana mutant rhd3 with an impaired ER network, NSm-GFP trafficking was significantly reduced, whereas GFP diffusion was not affected. We also showed that the ER-to-Golgi secretion pathway and the cytoskeleton transport systems were not involved in the intercellular trafficking of TSWV NSm. Importantly, TSWV cell-to-cell spread was delayed in the ER-defective rhd3 mutant, and this reduced viral infection was not due to reduced replication. On the basis of robust biochemical, cellular and genetic analysis, we established that the ER membrane transport system serves as an important direct route for intercellular trafficking of NSm and TSWV.
The tomato resistance protein Sw-5b differs from the classical coiled-coil nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat (CC-NB-LRR) resistance proteins by having an extra N-terminal domain (NTD). To understand how NTD, CC and NB-LRR regulate autoinhibition and activation of Sw-5b, we dissected the function(s) of each domain. When viral elicitor was absent, Sw-5b LRR suppressed the central NB-ARC to maintain autoinhibition of the NB-LRR segment. The CC and NTD domains independently and additively enhanced the autoinhibition of NB-LRR. When viral elicitor was present, the NB-LRR segment of Sw-5b was specifically activated to trigger a hypersensitive response. Surprisingly, Sw-5b CC suppressed the activation of NB-LRR, whereas the extra NTD of Sw-5b became a positive regulator and fully activated the resistance protein, probably by relieving the inhibitory effects of the CC. In infection assays of transgenic plants, the NB-LRR segment alone was insufficient to confer resistance against Tomato spotted wilt tospovirus; the layers of NTD and CC regulation on NB-LRR were required for Sw-5b to confer resistance. Based on these findings, we propose that, to counter the negative regulation of the CC on NB-LRR, Sw-5b evolved an extra NTD to coordinate with the CC, thus developing a multilayered regulatory mechanism to control autoinhibition and activation.
Oxymatrine (OM), a natural quinolizidine alkaloid extracted from the traditional Chinese herb Sophora flavescens, has been revealed to produce antitumor activities in various cancer cell lines, including glioblastoma lines, in vitro. However, the mechanisms by which OM exerts its antitumor effect against glioma are poorly understood. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of OM in the proliferation, apoptosis and invasion of glioma cells and to reveal the underlying mechanisms. The effects of OM on U251MG cells in vitro were determined using a Cell Counting Kit‑8 (CCK‑8) assay, flow cytometric analysis, Annexin V‑FITC/PI staining, DAPI staining, a terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase‑mediated dUTP nick end‑labeling (TUNEL) assay, a Transwell assay and western blotting. Our data indicated that OM inhibited proliferation, arrested the cell cycle at the G0/G1 phase, decreased the expression levels of G1 cell cycle regulatory proteins (cyclin D1, CDK4 and CDK6), inhibited invasion and induced apoptosis in glioma cells. Additional investigations revealed that the expression levels of p‑STAT3 and key proteins in the EGFR/PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway, such as p‑EGFR, p‑Akt and p‑mTOR, were markedly decreased after OM treatment, while the total STAT3, EGFR, Akt and mTOR levels were not affected. These findings indicated that the EGFR/PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway and STAT3 suppression may be a potential mechanism of the OM‑mediated antitumor effect in glioblastoma cells and that EGFR may be a target of OM. Hence, OM may be a promising drug and may offer a novel therapeutic strategy for malignant gliomas in the future.
The lack of high-performance anode materials has become a major obstacle to the development of Li- and Na-ion batteries. Recently, 2D transition metal borides (e.g. MBenes) have attracted much attention...
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