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Remodelling autoactive NLRs for broad-spectrum immunity in plants

Author

Listed:
  • Junzhu Wang

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

  • Tianyuan Chen

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

  • Zhendong Zhang

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

  • Mengjie Song

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

  • Tianxin Shen

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

  • Xin Wang

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

  • Xiyin Zheng

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

  • Yan Wang

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

  • Ke Song

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

  • Xiaoyang Ge

    (Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)

  • Kai Xu

    (Nanjing Normal University)

  • Tiancong Qi

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

  • Fuguang Li

    (Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences)

  • Yiguo Hong

    (Hebei Agricultural University
    University of Warwick)

  • Yule Liu

    (Tsinghua University
    Tsinghua–Peking Center for Life Sciences)

Abstract

Remodelling plant immune receptors has become a vital strategy for creating new disease resistance traits to combat the growing threat of plant pathogens to global food security and environmental sustainability1–17. However, current methods are constrained by the rapid evolution of plant pathogens and often lack broad-spectrum and durable protection. Here we report an innovative strategy to engineer broad-spectrum, durable and complete disease resistance in plants through expression of a chimeric protein containing a flexible polypeptide coupled with a single or dual conserved pathogen-originated protease cleavage site fused in frame to the N terminus of an autoactive nucleotide-binding and leucine-rich-repeat immune receptor (NLR) containing a coiled-coil or RESISTANCE TO POWDERY MILDEW 8-like coiled-coil domain. Following invasion, pathogen-originated specific proteases cleave the inactive chimeric protein to form free autoactive NLR, triggering broad-spectrum plant disease resistance. We demonstrate that a single engineered NLR can confer broad-spectrum and complete resistance against multiple potyviruses. Given that many pathogenic organisms across kingdoms encode proteases, this strategy has the potential to be exploited to control viruses, bacteria, oomycetes, fungi, nematodes and pests in plants.

Suggested Citation

  • Junzhu Wang & Tianyuan Chen & Zhendong Zhang & Mengjie Song & Tianxin Shen & Xin Wang & Xiyin Zheng & Yan Wang & Ke Song & Xiaoyang Ge & Kai Xu & Tiancong Qi & Fuguang Li & Yiguo Hong & Yule Liu, 2025. "Remodelling autoactive NLRs for broad-spectrum immunity in plants," Nature, Nature, vol. 645(8081), pages 737-745, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:645:y:2025:i:8081:d:10.1038_s41586-025-09252-z
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09252-z
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