Plant pathogenic fungi hijack phosphate signaling with conserved enzymatic effectors
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McCombe, Carl L.
Wegner, Alex
Wirtz, Louisa
Zamora, Chenie S.
Casanova, Florencia
Aditya, Shouvik
Greenwood, Julian R.
de Paula, Samuel
England, Eleanor
Shang, Sascha
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Inorganic phosphate (Pi) is essential for life, and plant cells monitor Pi availability by sensing inositol pyrophosphate (PP-InsP) levels. In this work, we describe the hijacking of plant phosphate sensing by a conserved family of Nudix hydrolase effectors from pathogenic Magnaporthe and Colletotrichum fungi. Structural and enzymatic analyses of the Nudix effector family demonstrate that they selectively hydrolyze PP-InsP. Gene deletion experiments of Nudix effectors in Magnaporthe oryzae, Colletotrichum higginsianum, and Colletotrichum graminicola indicate that PP-InsP hydrolysis substantially enhances disease symptoms in diverse pathosystems. Further, we show that this conserved effector family induces phosphate starvation signaling in plants. Our study elucidates a molecular mechanism, used by multiple phytopathogenic fungi, that manipulates the highly conserved plant phosphate sensing pathway to exacerbate disease.
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Science (New York, N.Y.)
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