4.2 Article

OsCERK2/OsRLK10, a homolog of OsCERK1, has a potential role for chitin-triggered immunity and arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis in rice

Journal

PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 2, Pages 119-+

Publisher

JAPANESE SOC PLANT CELL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.5511/plantbiotechnology.21.1222a

Keywords

AM symbiosis; chitin-triggered immunity; LysM receptor-like kinase; Oryza sativa (Rice); OsCERK2; OsRLK10

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) by KAKENHI [18H02208]
  2. MEXT from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan [S1411023]
  3. Council for Science and Technology Policy [GS028]
  4. [25114516]
  5. [15H01240]
  6. [19J40279]

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OsCERK1 plays a key role in chitin-triggered immunity and arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis in rice. Its putative paralog, OsRLK10, has a redundant function. While OsCERK2 also contributes to AM symbiosis, its contribution is weaker.
In rice, the lysin motif (LysM) receptor-like kinase OsCERK1, originally identified as the essential molecule for chitin-triggered immunity, plays a key role in arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis. As we previously reported, although AM colonization was largely repressed at 2 weeks after inoculation (WAI), arbuscules were observed at 5 WAI in oscerk1 mutant. Conversely, most mutant plants that defect the common symbiosis signaling pathway exhibited no arbuscule formation. Concerning the reason for this characteristic phenotype of oscerk1, we speculated that OsRLK10, which is a putative paralog of OsCERK1, may have a redundant function in AM symbiosis. The protein sequences of these two genes are highly conserved and it is estimated that the gene duplication occurred 150 million years ago. Here we demonstrated that OsCERK2/OsRLK10 induced AM colonization and chitin-triggered reactive oxygen species production in oscerk1 knockout mutant as similar to OsCERK1. The oscerk2 mutant showed a slight but significant reduction of AM colonization at 5 WAI, indicating the contribution of OsCERK2 for AM symbiosis. However, the oscerk2;oscerk1 double-knockout mutant produced arbuscules at 5 WAI as similar to the oscerk1 mutant, indicating that the redundancy of OsCERK1 and OsCERK2 did not explain the mycorrhizal colonization in oscerk1 at 5 WAI. These results indicated that OsCERK2 has a potential to regulate both chitin-triggered immunity and AM symbiosis and at least partially contributes to AM symbiosis in rice though the contribution of OsCERK2 appears to be weaker than that of OsCERK1.

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