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The F-box Containing Bacterial Effector RipG6 Destabilizes a Receptor-Like Cytoplasmic Kinase Involved in Plant Immune Signaling.

Jeon H, Choi J, Song N, Kim W, Segonzac C

Plant Signaling

Bacterial wilt quietly kills tomatoes, peppers, and potatoes in home gardens and farms worldwide — cracking open exactly how the pathogen disables plant immunity is the first step toward breeding vegetables that can finally fight it off.

A soil-dwelling bacterium that causes plants to wilt and die has a clever trick: it injects a special protein into plant cells that uses the plant's own internal 'trash disposal system' to shred a protein the plant needs to sound the immune alarm. Researchers figured out which plant protein gets destroyed and confirmed it plays a real role in helping plants defend themselves. This gives plant breeders a concrete target for developing wilt-resistant tomatoes and other crops.

Key Findings

1

RipG6 suppresses plant immune responses only when its F-box motif is intact, confirming it works by hijacking the plant's ubiquitin-proteasome protein-degradation machinery.

2

RipG6 directly interacts with and reduces the stability of a tomato immune kinase (RLCK-VIII-6), effectively dismantling a plant defense signaling component.

3

Closely related versions of the targeted kinase in wild tobacco and thale cress both function as positive regulators of plant immunity, suggesting this is a broadly conserved defense target across plant species.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists discovered how a soil bacterium that causes devastating wilting disease in tomatoes and peppers disarms plant defenses: it injects a protein called RipG6 that hijacks the plant's own cellular recycling system to destroy a key immune signaling component.

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Abstract Preview

Bacterial pathogens employ a large array of type IIIsecreted effectors to manipulate host cell immunity and metabolism. Ralstonia solanacearum species complex, the causal agent of bacterial wilt di...

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hub This connects to 13 other discoveries — Tomato, Wild Tobacco, Thale Cress plant-signaling, crop-improvement, bacterial-pathogen +2 more 5 related articles

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