J Integr Plant Biol ›› 2026, Vol. 68 ›› Issue (5): 1573-1589.DOI: 10.1111/jipb.70175

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  • 收稿日期:2025-11-03 接受日期:2026-01-14 出版日期:2026-05-01 发布日期:2026-05-08

OsPDCB1 mediates plasmodesmal callose defense and is targeted by a conserved planthopper effector

Hou-Hong Yang1, Peng-Fei Chen1,2, Fang Liu1, Jin-Li Zhang1, Qi Wei1, Jia-Chun He1, Wei-Xia Wang1, Feng-Xiang Lai1, Xiang-Jin Wei1, Qiang Fu1* and Pin-Jun Wan1*   

  1. 1. State Key Laboratory of Rice Biology and Breeding, China National Rice Research Institute, Hangzhou 311400, China
    2. Zhejiang Wuwangnong Seeds Shareholding Co., Ltd., Hangzhou 311215, China
    *Correspondences: Pin-Jun Wan (wanpinjun@caas.ac.cn, Dr Wan is fully responsible for the distribution of all materials associated with this article); Qiang Fu (fuqiang@caas.cn)
  • Received:2025-11-03 Accepted:2026-01-14 Online:2026-05-01 Published:2026-05-08
  • Supported by:
    This research was funded by the “Pioneer” and “Leading Goose” R&D Program of Zhejiang (2024C02001), the Earmarked Fund for China Agriculture Research System (CARS-01), the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2021YFD1401100), and the Rice Pest Management Research Group of the Agri-cultural Science and Technology Innovation Program of China Academy of Agricultural Science (CAAS-ASTIP-2021-CNRRI), and the Fundamental Research Funds for Central Public Welfare Research Institute (CPSIBRF-CNRRI-202406).

Abstract: The brown planthopper (Nilaparvata lugens St?l, BPH) is a major rice pest that feeds on sieve tubes, where plants respond by depositing callose to restrict phloem sap ingestion. However, the molecular basis of how rice stabilizes callose at plasmodesmata and how BPH overcomes this defense remains poorly understood. Here, we identify OsPDCB1, a plasmodesmal callose-binding protein that positively regulates BPH resistance by anchoring callose through its X8 domain. Loss- and gain-of-function analyses demonstrate that OsPDCB1 is essential for callose accumulation and effective phloem defense. We further identified NlVRSP1, a BPH salivary effector that is highly conserved across rice planthopper species. This effector directly interacts with OsPDCB1 and disrupts its callose-binding activity, revealing a previously uncharacterized effector?host interaction module at the plasmodesmal interface. Importantly, haplotype analysis uncovered a resistance-associated allele (OsPDCB1Hap1), enriched in Indica rice, which enhances resistance when introgressed into susceptible Japonica backgrounds. Collectively, these findings identify OsPDCB1 as a key mediator of callose-based defense and a promising genetic target for breeding BPH-resistant rice cultivars, while providing mechanistic insight into how insect effectors subvert plasmodesmal immunity.

Key words: callose, OsPDCB1, plasmodesma, brown planthopper, salivary protein

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