A conserved endonuclease from rust fungi suppresses plant extracellular
DNA-triggered immunity
Abstract
Nuclease 1 (NUC1) is a highly conserved non-specific endonuclease
present in vertebrates, fungi, and a few plant species. While the
involvement of yeast NUC1p in apoptotic cell death independent of
metacaspase or apoptosis-inducing factors is documented, its function in
other fungi, particularly pathogenic ones, remains elusive. In this
study, we identified and characterized the homolog of yeast NUC1p,
termed PstNUC1, in Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici (
Pst), the causal agent of wheat stripe rust. PstNUC1 was induced
during infection and was secreted to the extracellular space of the
host. Silencing of PstNUC1 significantly attenuated the virulence
of Pst, suggesting its critical role in pathogenicity. Exogenous
treatment of PstNUC1 diminished the extracellular DNA (exDNA)-triggered
plant immune response, including cell death, oxygen peroxide production,
and upregulation of Pathogenesis-related genes. Notebaly, overexpression
of wild-type PstNUC1, but not a signal peptide-deficient mutant
(PstNUC1 ΔSP), in wheat compromised exDNA-triggered
immunity, resulting in enhanced susceptibility to Pst infection.
These finding collectively highlight the contribution of PstNUC1 to
virulence through degradation of exDNA, thereby dampening the
exDNA-induced plant immune response.