2015
DOI: 10.1111/mpp.12303
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SCR96, a small cysteine‐rich secretory protein of Phytophthora cactorum, can trigger cell death in the Solanaceae and is important for pathogenicity and oxidative stress tolerance

Abstract: Peptides and small molecules produced by both the plant pathogen Phytophthora and host plants in the apoplastic space mediate the relationship between the interplaying organisms. Various Phytophthora apoplastic effectors, including small cysteine-rich (SCR) secretory proteins, have been identified, but their roles during interaction remain to be determined. Here, we identified an SCR effector encoded by scr96, one of three novel genes encoding SCR proteins in P. cactorum with similarity to the P. cactorum phyt… Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…The first representative, P. cactorum PcF, induces the expression of plant pathogenicity genes and programmed cell death (Orsomando et al ., ). Previously analysed Phytophthora species contain 3–19 SCR genes (Chen et al ., ; Orsomando et al ., ). A search using P. cactorum SCR genes has revealed that the P. cinnamomi genome contains one homologue of PcF , eight homologues of Scr96 , 15 homologues of Scr99 and one homologue of Scr121 (Table ), and thus appears to have the largest PcF/SCR gene family reported so far.…”
Section: Plant–pathogen Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…The first representative, P. cactorum PcF, induces the expression of plant pathogenicity genes and programmed cell death (Orsomando et al ., ). Previously analysed Phytophthora species contain 3–19 SCR genes (Chen et al ., ; Orsomando et al ., ). A search using P. cactorum SCR genes has revealed that the P. cinnamomi genome contains one homologue of PcF , eight homologues of Scr96 , 15 homologues of Scr99 and one homologue of Scr121 (Table ), and thus appears to have the largest PcF/SCR gene family reported so far.…”
Section: Plant–pathogen Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…A search using P. cactorum SCR genes has revealed that the P. cinnamomi genome contains one homologue of PcF , eight homologues of Scr96 , 15 homologues of Scr99 and one homologue of Scr121 (Table ), and thus appears to have the largest PcF/SCR gene family reported so far. Silencing of P. cactorum Scr96 reduces pathogen virulence on Nicotiana benthamiana leaves and makes it more sensitive to oxidative stress (Chen et al ., ), indicating that Phytophthora SCR proteins are effectors that function as virulence factors under the same circumstances in which they trigger plant cell death.…”
Section: Plant–pathogen Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some SCPs are required for full virulence in many pathogens that have been analysed (Bolton et al ., ; Doehlemann et al , ; Chen et al , ; Qin et al , ). In our study, we found that deletion of VdSCP27 , VdSCP113 , or VdSCP126 independently did not affect the virulence of V. dahliae in tobacco and cotton plants (Figure ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Verticillium dahliae is a notorious fungal pathogen that attacks a wide range of hosts, targets the xylem tissue, and causes verticillium wilt disease on many economically important crops (Klosterman et al , ; Inderbitzin and Subbarao, ). Previous studies have shown that secreted proteins probably play a critical role in the pathogenesis of V. dahliae (Fradin and Thomma, ; Chu et al , ; Chen et al , ; ; Zhang et al , ), and the function or the activity of several secreted proteins have been elucidated (de Sain and Rep, ; Klimes et al , ; Wang et al , ; Zhang et al , ). Similar to the mechanisms discovered in other phytopathogens, V. dahliae secretes proteins to manipulate host immunity during infection (de Jonge et al , ; Zhou et al , ; Santhanam et al , ; Liu et al , ; Gui et al , , ; Kombrink et al , ; Zhang et al , ; Qin et al , ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…sclerotiorum by interaction with QCR8, a subunit of the cytochrome b-c1 complex of mitochondrial respiratory chain in plants [39]. Another small cysteine-rich secretory protein, SCR96, from Phytophthora cactorum , was transcriptionally induced throughout the developmental and infection stages [40]. It can trigger cell death in the Solanaceae and is important for pathogenicity and oxidative stress tolerance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%