4.7 Article

The Protein Phosphatase GhAP2C1 Interacts Together with GhMPK4 to Synergistically Regulate the Immune Response to Fusarium oxysporum in Cotton

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23042014

Keywords

MAPK cascade; plant immune responses; protein phosphatase; cotton; Fusarium oxysporum; plant-microbe interactions

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31901431, 31971823]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province [ZR2019BC015]

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This study reveals the important role of the GhMKK6-GhMPK4 cascade signaling pathway in cotton immunity and explores its regulatory mechanism. The overexpression of GhMKK6 and GhMPK4 results in unfavorable immune response characteristics, while the screening and identification of the negative regulator AP2C1 suggests its co-regulation with GhMPK4 in cotton's immune response to Fusarium wilt.
The plant mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade plays an important role in mediating responses to biotic and abiotic stresses and is the main pathway through which extracellular stimuli are transduced intracellularly as signals. Our previous research showed that the GhMKK6-GhMPK4 cascade signaling pathway plays an important role in cotton immunity. To further analyze the role and regulatory mechanism of the GhMKK6-GhMPK4 cascade signaling pathway in cotton resistance to Fusarium wilt, we functionally analyzed GhMPK4. Our results show that silencing GhMPK4 reduces cotton tolerance to Fusarium wilt and reduces the expression of several resistance genes. Further experiments revealed that GhMPK4 is similar to GhMKK6, both of whose overexpression cause unfavorable cotton immune response characteristics. By using a yeast two-hybrid screening library and performing a bioinformatics analysis, we screened and identified a negative regulator of the MAPK kinase-protein phosphatase AP2C1. Through the functional analysis of AP2C1, it was found that, after being silenced, GhAP2C1 increased resistance to Fusarium wilt, but GhAP2C1 overexpression caused sensitivity to Fusarium wilt. These findings show that GhAP2C1 interacts together with GhMPK4 to regulate the immune response of cotton to Fusarium oxysporum, which provides important data for functionally analyzing and studying the feedback regulatory mechanism of the MAPK cascade and helps to clarify the regulatory mechanism through which the MAPK cascade acts in response to pathogens.

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