4.8 Article

A novel family of secreted insect proteins linked to plant gall development

期刊

CURRENT BIOLOGY
卷 31, 期 9, 页码 1836-+

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.01.104

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资金

  1. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (Hatch) [W4122]
  2. US National Institutes of Health (NIH) [P30 CA016058]
  3. OSU
  4. OSUCCC

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In a complex form of inter-species exploitation, insects induce gall formation on plants, altering plant cell biology dramatically to provide themselves with nutrition and shelter. Specific insect molecules involved in this process have yet to be fully identified, but research on aphids has revealed the potential role of DGC and BICYCLE proteins in controlling gall development through differential gene expression. These genes have likely evolved through diversifying selection in a molecular arms race between aphids and their host plants.
In an elaborate form of inter-species exploitation, many insects hijack plant development to induce novel plant organs called galls that provide the insect with a source of nutrition and a temporary home. Galls result from dramatic reprogramming of plant cell biology driven by insect molecules, but the roles of specific insect molecules in gall development have not yet been determined. Here, we study the aphid Hormaphis cornu, which makes distinctive ``cone'' galls on leaves of witch hazel Hamamelis virginiana. We found that derived genetic variants in the aphid gene determinant of gall color (dgc) are associated with strong downregulation of dgc transcription in aphid salivary glands, upregulation in galls of seven genes involved in anthocyanin synthesis, and deposition of two red anthocyanins in galls. We hypothesize that aphids inject DGC protein into galls and that this results in differential expression of a small number of plant genes. dgc is a member of a large, diverse family of novel predicted secreted proteins characterized by a pair of widely spaced cysteine-tyrosine-cysteine (CYC) residues, which we named BICYCLE proteins. bicycle genes are most strongly expressed in the salivary glands specifically of galling aphid generations, suggesting that they may regulate many aspects of gall development. bicycle genes have experienced unusually frequent diversifying selection, consistent with their potential role controlling gall development in a molecular arms race between aphids and their host plants.

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