Author:
Singla-Rastogi Meenu,Charvin Magali,Thiébeauld Odon,Perez-Quintero Alvaro L,Ravet Antinéa,Emidio-Fortunato Antonio,Mendu Venugopal,Navarro Lionel
Abstract
AbstractPlant small RNAs (sRNAs) and/or double-stranded RNAs (dsRNAs) trigger RNA interference (RNAi) in interacting eukaryotic pathogens or parasites. However, it is unknown whether this phenomenon could operate in bacterial phytopathogens, which lack a eukaryotic-like RNAi machinery. Here, we first show that Arabidopsis-encoded inverted repeat transgenes trigger silencing ofPseudomonas syringaeheterologous reporter and endogenous virulence-associated genes during infection. Antibacterial Gene Silencing (AGS) of the latter was associated with a reduced pathogenesis, which was also observed upon application of corresponding plant-derived RNAs onto wild-type plants prior to infection. We additionally demonstrate that sRNAs directed against virulence factor transcripts were causal for silencing and pathogenesis reduction, while cognate long dsRNAs were inactive. Overall, this study provides the first evidence that plant sRNAs can directly reprogram gene expression in a phytopathogenic bacterium and may have wider implications in the understanding of how plants regulate transcriptome, community composition and genome evolution of associated bacteria.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
13 articles.
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