AI Article Synopsis

  • Victorin, a toxin from Cochliobolus victoriae, binds to the P protein of the glycine decarboxylase complex in mitochondria and triggers defense responses like phytoalexin synthesis and programmed cell death in host plants.
  • Research indicates that victorin-induced cell death occurs at the cell surface before entry into the cell, leading to apoptosis-like effects and other reactive responses.
  • The study suggests that extracellular alkalization plays a crucial regulatory role in the cellular responses to victorin, proposing a model where the toxin activates a hypersensitive response that results in cell death, independent of mitochondrial involvement.

Article Abstract

The host-selective toxin victorin is produced by Cochliobolus victoriae, the causal agent of victoria blight of oats. Victorin has been shown to bind to the P protein of the glycine decarboxylase complex (GDC) in mitochondria, and induce defense-related responses such as phytoalexin synthesis, extracellular alkalization and programmed cell death. However, evidence demonstrating that the GDC plays a critical role in the onset of cell death is still lacking, and the role of defense-like responses in the pathogenicity has yet to be elucidated. Here, cytofluorimetric analyses, using the fluorescein (VicFluor) or bovine serum albumin-fluorescein derivative of victorin (VicBSA), demonstrated that victorin-induced cell death occurs before these conjugates traverse the plasma membrane. As with native victorin, VicBSA clearly elicits apoptosis-like cell death, production of phytoalexin, extracellular alkalization, and generation of nitric oxide and reactive oxygen intermediates. These results suggest that the initial recognition of victorin takes place on the cell surface, not in mitochondria, and leads to the activation of a battery of victorin-induced responses. Pharmacological studies showed that extracellular alkalization is the essential regulator for both victorin- and VicBSA-induced cellular responses. We propose a model where victorin may kill the host cell by activating an HR-like response, independent of the binding to the GDC, through ion fluxes across the plasma membrane.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pcp/pci193DOI Listing

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