4.7 Review

Plant Executor Genes

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23031524

Keywords

executor gene; TALE; R gene; innate immunity; plant resistance

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2019YFD1000703]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31801729]
  3. project of the Sanya Yazhou Bay Science and Technology City [SKJC-2020-02-001]
  4. Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences

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Executor (E) genes are a new type of plant resistance genes that activate expression and trigger hypersensitive response (HR) in plants by trapping TALEs released by pathogens. Utilizing E gene resistance plays a significant role in disease resistance breeding.
Executor (E) genes comprise a new type of plant resistance (R) genes, identified from host-Xanthomonas interactions. The Xanthomonas-secreted transcription activation-like effectors (TALEs) usually function as major virulence factors, which activate the expression of the so-called susceptibility (S) genes for disease development. This activation is achieved via the binding of the TALEs to the effector-binding element (EBE) in the S gene promoter. However, host plants have evolved EBEs in the promoters of some otherwise silent R genes, whose expression directly causes a host cell death that is characterized by a hypersensitive response (HR). Such R genes are called E genes because they trap the pathogen TALEs in order to activate expression, and the resulting HR prevents pathogen growth and disease development. Currently, deploying E gene resistance is becoming a major component in disease resistance breeding, especially for rice bacterial blight resistance. Currently, the biochemical mechanisms, or the working pathways of the E proteins, are still fuzzy. There is no significant nucleotide sequence homology among E genes, although E proteins share some structural motifs that are probably associated with the signal transduction in the effector-triggered immunity. Here, we summarize the current knowledge regarding TALE-type avirulence proteins, E gene activation, the E protein structural traits, and the classification of E genes, in order to sharpen our understanding of the plant E genes.

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