Primary restriction of S-RNase cytotoxicity by a stepwise ubiquitination and degradation pathway in Petunia hybrida

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Abstract

In self-incompatible Petunia species, the pistil S-RNase acts as cytotoxin to inhibit self-pollination but is polyubiquitinated by the pollen-specific nonself S-locus F-box (SLF) proteins and subsequently degraded by the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS), allowing cross-pollination. However, it remains unclear how S-RNase is restricted by the UPS. Using biochemical analyses, we first show that Petunia hybrida S3-RNase is largely ubiquitinated by K48-linked polyubiquitin chains at three regions, R I, R II and R III. R I is ubiquitinated in unpollinated, self-pollinated and cross-pollinated pistils, indicating its occurrence before PhS3-RNase uptake into pollen tubes, whereas R II and R III are exclusively ubiquitinated in cross-pollinated pistils. Transgenic analyses showed that removal of R II ubiquitination resulted in significantly reduced seed sets from cross-pollination and that of R I and R III to a lesser extent, indicating their increased cytotoxicity. Consistent with this, the mutated R II of PhS3-RNase resulted in a marked reduction of its degradation, whereas that of R I and R III resulted in less reduction. Taken together, we demonstrate that PhS3-RNase R II functions as a major ubiquitination region for its destruction and R I and R III as minor ones, revealing that its cytotoxicity is primarily restricted by a stepwise UPS mechanism for cross-pollination in P. hybrida.

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Zhao, H., Song, Y., Li, J., Zhang, Y., Huang, H., Li, Q., … Xue, Y. (2021). Primary restriction of S-RNase cytotoxicity by a stepwise ubiquitination and degradation pathway in Petunia hybrida. New Phytologist, 231(3), 1249–1264. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.17438

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