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Suppression of citrus canker disease mediated by flagellin perception

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Author(s):
Andrade, Maxuel de Oliveira ; da Silva, Jaqueline Cristina ; Soprano, Adriana Santos ; Shimo, Hugo Massayoshi ; Leme, Adriana Franco Paes ; Benedetti, Celso Eduardo
Total Authors: 6
Document type: Journal article
Source: MOLECULAR PLANT PATHOLOGY; v. N/A, p. 15-pg., 2023-01-24.
Abstract

Citrus cancer, caused by strains of Xanthomonas citri (Xc) and Xanthomonas aurantifolii (Xa), is one of the most economically important citrus diseases. Although our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying citrus canker development has advanced remarkably in recent years, exactly how citrus plants fight against these pathogens remains largely unclear. Using a Xa pathotype C strain that infects Mexican lime only and sweet oranges as a pathosystem to study the immune response triggered by this bacterium in these hosts, we herein report that the Xa flagellin C protein (XaFliC) acts as a potent defence elicitor in sweet oranges. Just as Xa blocked canker formation when coinfiltrated with Xc in sweet orange leaves, two polymorphic XaFliC peptides designated flgIII-20 and flgIII-27, not related to flg22 or flgII-28 but found in many Xanthomonas species, were sufficient to protect sweet orange plants from Xc infection. Accordingly, ectopic expression of XaFliC in a Xc FliC-defective mutant completely abolished the ability of this mutant to grow and cause canker in sweet orange but not Mexican lime plants. Because XaFliC and flgIII-27 also specifically induced the expression of several defence-related genes, our data suggest that XaFliC acts as a main immune response determinant in sweet orange plants. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 20/02547-0 - Discovery and development of new antimicrobial compounds against gram-negative bacteria resistant to carbapenems and cephalosporins
Grantee:Celso Eduardo Benedetti
Support Opportunities: Regular Research Grants