'Master regulator' protein controls flowering, disease resistance in plants
"MED18 is like a master regulator," said Tesfaye Mengiste, professor of botany and plant pathology and the study's lead researcher. "The versatility of its functions is surprising." Understanding and manipulating MED18 could lead to improved resistance to necrotrophic fungal diseases in plants, Mengiste said.
Necrotrophs are fungi that infect and kill plant cells to take their nutrients, causing diseases that are difficult and costly to manage. Examples include northern leaf blight, ear rot and grey mould, which is estimated to cause a greater economic loss of ornamental plants and vegetables than any other disease.
When necrotrophs attack, they stimulate an increase in the expression of two plant genes that render a plant more susceptible to infection. But MED18 works with other proteins to "turn off" those target genes, contributing to disease resistance in an indirect yet important way. MED18 also helps activate a gene that bolsters a plant's defence against wounding and infection by necrotrophs.
Mengiste and his fellow researchers found that the presence of MED18 limited disease symptoms and fungal growth in Arabidopsis plants infected with grey mould fungus. "This provides a new hope for resisting fungal infections because MED18 functions differently than more classical defence tactics," Mengiste said.
Using MED18 to toughen up plants' defence against fungal diseases would not necessarily require generating transgenic plants, said Mengiste. Natural variants with desirable characteristics could also be used to cultivate more disease-resistant specimens in plant populations. The study showed that MED18 plays a vital role in other plant functions as well, including flowering time and how a plant responds to abscisic acid, a hormone that regulates how plants cope with environment stresses such as drought.
The protein is also involved in starting, guiding and terminating transcription, impacting multiple steps of gene expression. Mengiste compares MED18's role in transcription with that of an orchestra conductor who begins the music, signals the entrance of certain instruments and draws the piece to a close.
The variability of the protein's functions makes it a prime target for genetic improvement of plants, he said. "Now that we know what it does, we can use MED18 to improve crop growth, fruit production, flowering time and disease resistance."
The paper was published in Nature Communications and is available at nature.com
The National Science Foundation and the Next-Generation BioGreen 21 Program provided funding for the research.
Source: Purdue University