Leafhopper salivary carboxylesterase suppresses JA-Ile synthesis to facilitate initial arbovirus transmission in rice phloem.

Plant Commun

Vector-borne Virus Research Center, Fujian Province Key Laboratory of Plant Virology, Institute of Plant Virology, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou, Fujian 350002, China. Electronic address:

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plant jasmonoyl-L-isoleucine (JA-Ile) is crucial for plant defense against insect feeding, but insect salivary components may suppress its synthesis, aiding viral transmission.
  • A newly identified leafhopper enzyme, CarE10, is secreted into rice phloem, where it binds to the enzyme JAR1, preventing JA-Ile synthesis.
  • This process is enhanced by rice reovirus, which promotes increased secretion of CarE10, thereby reducing JA-Ile levels and making the plants more attractive to insect vectors for virus transmission.

Article Abstract

Plant jasmonoyl-L-isoleucine (JA-Ile) is a major defense signal against insect feeding, but whether or how insect salivary effectors suppress JA-Ile synthesis and thus facilitate viral transmission in the plant phloem remains elusive. Insect carboxylesterases (CarEs) are the third major family of detoxification enzymes. Here, we identify a new leafhopper CarE, CarE10, that is specifically expressed in salivary glands and is secreted into the rice phloem as a saliva component. Leafhopper CarE10 directly binds to rice jasmonate resistant 1 (JAR1) and promotes its degradation by the proteasome system. Moreover, the direct association of CarE10 with JAR1 clearly impairs JAR1 enzyme activity for conversion of JA to JA-Ile in an in vitro JA-Ile synthesis system. A devastating rice reovirus activates and promotes the co-secretion of virions and CarE10 via virus-induced vesicles into the saliva-storing salivary cavities of the leafhopper vector and ultimately into the rice phloem to establish initial infection. Furthermore, a virus-mediated increase in CarE10 secretion or overexpression of CarE10 in transgenic rice plants causes reduced levels of JAR1 and thus suppresses JA-Ile synthesis, promoting host attractiveness to insect vectors and facilitating initial viral transmission. Our findings provide insight into how the insect salivary protein CarE10 suppresses host JA-Ile synthesis to promote initial virus transmission in the rice phloem.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11412928PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xplc.2024.100939DOI Listing

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