The Fusarium graminearum Effector Protease FgTPP1 Suppresses Immune Responses and Facilitates Fusarium Head Blight Disease
Most plant pathogens secrete effector proteins to circumvent host immune responses, thereby promoting pathogen virulence. One such pathogen is the fungus Fusarium graminearum, which causes Fusarium Head Blight (FHB) disease on wheat and barley. Transcriptomic analyses revealed that F. graminearum expresses many candidate effector proteins during early phases of the infection process, some of which are annotated as proteases. However, the contributions of these proteases to virulence remains poorly defined. Here, we characterize a F. graminearum endopeptidase, FgTPP1 (FGSG_11164), that is highly upregulated during wheat spikelet infection and is secreted from fungal cells. To elucidate the potential role of FgTPP1 in F. graminearum virulence, we generated FgTPP1 deletion mutants (ΔFgtpp1) and performed FHB infection assays. While the number of completely bleached spikes infected by F. graminearum wild-type reached 50% of total infected spikes, the number of fully bleached spikes infected by ΔFgtpp1 mutants was 25%, suggesting FgTPP1 contributes to fungal virulence. Transient expression of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged FgTPP1 revealed that FgTPP1 localizes, in part, to chloroplasts and attenuates chitin-mediated activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling, reactive oxygen species production, and cell death induced by an autoactive disease resistance protein when expressed in planta. Notably, the FgTPP1 protein is conserved across the Ascomycota phylum, making it a core effector among ascomycete plant pathogens. These properties make FgTPP1 an ideal candidate for decoy substrate engineering, with the goal of engineering resistance to FHB, and likely other crop diseases caused by ascomycete fungi.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Gold |
| Additional information | FUNDING This research was supported by the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service (USDA-ARS) research project 5020-21220-014-00D, the U.S. Wheat and Barley Scab Initiative (award number 58-5020-0-013), and the USDANational Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) grant awarded to R. Innes and M.Helm (award number 2022-67013-38265). R. Darma is supported by a grant from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) (BB/X012131/1). Additional funding to support K. Hammond-Kosack, M. Urban and M. Darino has been provided by the BBSRC Institute Strategic Programme (ISP) Grants Designing Future Wheat (BBS/E/C/000I0250) and Delivering Sustainable Wheat (BB/X011003/1 and BBS/E/RH/230001B) and the BBSRC grant (BB/X012131/1). E. Kroll is supported by the BBSRC-funded South West Biosciences Doctoral Training Partnership(BB/T008741/1). |
| Keywords | ROS, MAPK, Cell death, Pathogenesis, Immune suppression, Fusarium head blight, Fusarium graminearum, Triticum aestivum, Wheat |
| Project | UKRI/BBSRC-NSF/BIO Determining the Roles of Fusarium Effector Proteases in Plant Pathogenesis, DFW - Designing Future Wheat - Work package 2 (WP2) - Added value and resilience, Delivering Sustainable Wheat, Delivering Sustainable Wheat (WP2): Delivering Resilience to Biotic Stress, Semiochemical-based alternative concepts for the management of wireworms |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 10:43 |
| Last Modified | 21 Jan 2026 17:24 |


