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      Cooperative regulatory functions of miR858 and MYB83 during cyst nematode parasitism.

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          Abstract

          microRNAs (miRNAs) recently have been established as key regulators of transcriptome reprogramming that defines cell function and identity. Nevertheless, the molecular functions of the greatest number of miRNA genes remain to be determined. Here, we report cooperative regulatory functions of miR858 and its MYB83 transcription factor target gene in transcriptome reprogramming during Heterodera cyst nematode parasitism of Arabidopsis. Gene expression analyses and promoter-GUS fusion assays documented a role of miR858 in post-transcriptional regulation of MYB83 in the Heterodera schachtii-induced feeding sites, the syncytia. Constitutive overexpression of miR858 interfered with H. schachtii parasitism of Arabidopsis, leading to reduced susceptibility, while reduced miR858 abundance enhanced plant susceptibility. Similarly, MYB83 expression increases were conducive to nematode infection because overexpression of a non-cleavable coding sequence of MYB83 significantly increased plant susceptibility, whereas a myb83 mutation rendered the plants less susceptible. In addition, RNA-seq analysis revealed that genes involved in hormone signaling pathways, defense response and glucosinolate biosynthesis, cell wall modification, sugar transport, and transcriptional control are the key etiological factors by which MYB83-facilitates nematode parasitism of Arabidopsis. Furthermore, we discovered that miR858-mediated silencing of MYB83 is tightly regulated through a feedback loop that might contribute to fine-tuning the expression of more than a thousand of MYB83-regulated genes in the H. schachtii-induced syncytium. Together, our results suggest a role of the miR858-MYB83 regulatory system in finely balancing gene expression patterns during H. schachtii parasitism of Arabidopsis to ensure optimal cellular function.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Plant Physiol.
          Plant physiology
          American Society of Plant Biologists (ASPB)
          1532-2548
          0032-0889
          May 16 2017
          Affiliations
          [1 ] University of Tennessee CITY: Knoxville STATE: Tennessee United States Of America [US].
          [2 ] University of Tennessee CITY: Knoxville United States Of America [US].
          [3 ] University of Tennessee CITY: Knoxville STATE: TN United States Of America [US].
          [4 ] Iowa State University Department of Plant Pathology, 351 Bessey Hall CITY: Ames STATE: Iowa POSTAL_CODE: 50011 United States Of America [US].
          [5 ] University of Tennessee CITY: Knoxville STATE: Tennessee POSTAL_CODE: 37996-4561 United States Of America [US] thewezi@utk.edu.
          Article
          pp.17.00273
          10.1104/pp.17.00273
          28512179
          324b10ef-7a33-4b4c-b7ba-011fbc306a8a
          History

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