4.7 Article

OsCUL3a-Associated Molecular Switches Have Functions in Cell Metabolism, Cell Death, and Disease Resistance

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 68, Issue 19, Pages 5471-5482

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b07426

Keywords

disease resistance; hydrogen peroxide; lesion mimic; molecular switch; cell metabolism balance; grain quality

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31871236, 31801726, 31521064]
  2. National Key Transgenic Program [2016ZX08001002]
  3. Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of the Agricultural Sciences [CAAS-ASTIP-2013-CNRRI]

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This study applies parallel reaction monitoring (PRM) proteomics and CRISPR-Cas9 mutagenesis to identify relationships between cell metabolism, cell death, and disease resistance. In oscul3a (oscullin3a) mutants, OsCUL3a-associated molecular switches are responsible for disrupted cell metabolism that leads to increased total lipid content in rice grain, a late accumulation of H2O2 in leaves, enhanced Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae disease resistance, and suppressed panicle and first internode growth. In oscul3a mutants, PRM-confirmed upregulated molecular switch proteins include lipoxygenases (CM-LOX1 and CM-LOX2), suggesting a novel connection between ferroptosis and rice lesion mimic formation. Rice immunity-associated proteins OsNPR1 and OsNPR3 were shown to interact with each other and have opposing regulatory effects based on the cell death phenotype of osnpr1/oscul3a and osnpr3/oscul3a double mutants. Together, these results describe a network that regulates plant growth, disease resistance, and grain quality that includes the E3 ligase OsCUL3a, cell metabolism-associated molecular switches, and immunity switches OsNPR1 and OsNPR3.

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