Actin Depolymerization Factor (ADF) Moonlighting: Nuclear Immune Regulation by Interacting with WRKY Transcription Factors and Shaping the Transcriptome.
Remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton is a critical process for plant immunity, essential for the transport, activation, and stabilization of immune-regulatory molecules and organelles. In this process, actin depolymerization factors (ADFs) function as key players through severing and depolymerizing actin microfilaments. However, recent evidence suggests that ADFs may possess non-canonical immune functions inside the nucleus, in addition to the canonic cytosolic role, a phenomenon not adequately explained by the traditional mechanistic model of ADF-actin dynamics. In this study, we demonstrate that Arabidopsis ADFs exhibit a moonlighting function in the nucleus, where they interact with transcriptional machinery to regulate the transcriptome during both the resting state and the immune responses. We show that ADF2/3/4 have redundant functions in defense against virulent and avirulent Pseudomonas syringae. Notably, it is nuclear - rather than cytosolic - ADFs that contribute to defense against P. syringae and mediate pro-immune transcription. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that nuclear ADFs interact with transcription factors, histone complexes, and other components of the transcriptional machinery. Specifically, ADF2/3/4 can form a complex with WRKY transcription factors, such as WRKY22/29/48, thereby directly regulating WRKY activity to shape the pro-immune transcriptome. In summary, our study reveals that ADFs moonlight as direct regulators of transcription factors, mediating a broad range of nuclear-cytoplasmic regulation in plant immunity and potentially other biological processes.