AI Article Synopsis

  • Fungal effectors are important for how pathogenic fungi interact with their hosts, affecting disease development and pathogen spread.
  • The study focused on CFEM proteins from a specific fungus, identifying 19 proteins and highlighting two—NsCFEM1 and NsCFEM2—as potential effectors due to their lack of transmembrane domains.
  • NsCFEM1 was found to inhibit programmed cell death and is linked to fungal virulence, while NsCFEM2 is associated with cell wall stability, laying groundwork for understanding how these proteins influence host interactions in the studied disease.

Article Abstract

Fungal effectors play a crucial role in the interaction between pathogenic fungi and their hosts. These interactions directly influence the invasion and spread of pathogens, and the development of diseases. Common in fungal extracellular membrane (CFEM) effectors are closely associated with the pathogenicity, cell wall stability, and pathogenic processes of pathogenic fungi. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of CFEM proteins in in pathogen-host interactions. We retrieved 19 proteins containing CFEM structural domains from the genome of . By systematic analysis, five NsCFEM proteins had signal peptides but lacked transmembrane structural domains, and thus were considered as potential effectors. Among them, NsCFEM1 and NsCFEM2 were successfully cloned and their functions were further investigated. The validation results show that NsCFEM1 was localized in the cell membrane and nucleus, whereas NsCFEM2 was exclusively observed in the cell membrane. Both were identified as secreted proteins. Additionally, NsCFEM1 inhibited Bax-induced programmed cell death in , whereas NsCFEM2 did not induce or inhibit this response. NsCFEM1 was implicated as a virulence factor that contributes to fungal growth, development, stress response, and pathogenicity. NsCFEM2 was implicated in maintenance of cell wall stability. This study lays a foundation for elucidating the role of CFEM proteins in the pathogen of fishscale bamboo rhombic-spot caused by . In particular, the functional studies of NsCFEM1 and NsCFEM2 revealed their potential roles in the interaction between and the host .

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11176510PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2024.1396273DOI Listing

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