A plant phytosulfokine peptide initiates auxin-dependent immunity through cytosolic Ca 2+ signaling in tomato

Huan Zhang, Zhangjian Hu, Cui Lei, Chenfei Zheng, Jiao Wang, Shujun Shao, Xin Li, Xiaojian Xia, Xinzhong Cai, Jie Zhou, Yanhong Zhou, Jingquan Yu, Christine H. Foyer, Kai Shi*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

50 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Phytosulfokine (PSK) is a disulfated pentapeptide that is an important signaling molecule. Although it has recently been implicated in plant defenses to pathogen infection, the mechanisms involved remain poorly understood. Using surface plasmon resonance and gene silencing approaches, we showed that the tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) PSK receptor PSKR1, rather than PSKR2, functioned as the major PSK receptor in immune responses. Silencing of PSK signaling genes rendered tomato more susceptible to infection by the economically important necrotrophic pathogen Botrytis cinerea. Analysis of tomato mutants defective in either defense hormone biosynthesis or signaling demonstrated that PSK-induced immunity required auxin biosynthesis and associated defense pathways. Here, using aequorin-expressing tomato plants, we provide evidence that PSK perception by tomato PSKR1 elevated cytosolic [Ca 2+ ], leading to auxin-dependent immune responses via enhanced binding activity between calmodulins and the auxin biosynthetic YUCs. Thus, our data demonstrate that PSK acts as a damage-associated molecular pattern and is perceived mainly by PSKR1, which increases cytosolic [Ca 2+ ] and activates auxin-mediated pathways that enhance immunity of tomato plants to B. cinerea.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)652-667
Number of pages16
JournalPlant Cell
Volume30
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Apr 2018

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Plant Science
  • Cell Biology

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