| Literature DB >> 22645549 |
Klaas Bouwmeester1, Harold J G Meijer, Francine Govers.
Abstract
Plants are constantly beset by pathogenic organisms. To successfully infect their hosts, plant pathogens secrete effector proteins, many of which are translocated to the inside of the host cell where they manipulate normal physiological processes and undermine host defense. The way by which effectors cross the frontier to reach the inside of the host cell varies among different classes of pathogens. For oomycete plant pathogens - like the potato late blight pathogen Phytophthora infestans - it has been shown that effector translocation to the host cell cytoplasm is dependent on conserved amino acid motifs that are present in the N-terminal part of effector proteins. One of these motifs, known as the RXLR motif, has a strong resemblance with a host translocation motif found in effectors secreted by Plasmodium species. These malaria parasites, that reside inside specialized vacuoles in red blood cells, make use of a specific protein translocation complex to export effectors from the vacuole into the red blood cell. Whether or not also oomycete RXLR effectors require a translocation complex to cross the frontier is still under investigation. For one P. infestans RXLR effector named IPI-O we have found a potential host target that could play a role in establishing the first contact between this effector and the host cell. This membrane spanning lectin receptor kinase, LecRK-I.9, interacts with IPI-O via the tripeptide RGD that overlaps with the RXLR motif. In animals, RGD is a well-known cell adhesion motif; it binds to integrins, which are membrane receptors that regulate many cellular processes and which can be hijacked by pathogens for either effector translocation or pathogen entry into host cells.Entities:
Keywords: LecRK-I.9; Phytophthora; RGD; RXLR–dEER; effector; lectin receptor kinase; oomycetes
Year: 2011 PMID: 22645549 PMCID: PMC3355728 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2011.00075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Effectors crossing the host–pathogen interface. (A) Oomycete plant pathogens secrete RXLR–dEER effector proteins from haustoria into the extrahaustorial matrix (em). How these effectors cross the plant plasma membrane (ppm) to reach the host cell cytoplasm is unknown. (B) Bacterial pathogens exploit the Type III secretion system (T3SS) to inject effectors into the host cell cytoplasm. T3SS is a pathogen-derived multi-protein needle-like structure that penetrates the plant cell wall (pcw) and the plasma membrane. (C) Malaria parasites (Plasmodium spp.) invade red blood cells and secrete effector proteins into the parasitophorous vacuole (pv). PEXEL effectors are translocated to the red blood cell cytoplasm (rbcc) via a pathogen-derived translocon complex (PTEX), which resides in the parasitophorous vacuole membrane (pvm). Effectors are shown in different colored bars [in (A,C)] and hexagons [in (B)]. In the colored bars the red box is the signal peptide (SP) and the blue box the RXLR or RXLXE/Q motif.
Figure 2. This results in a new N-terminus which is then N-acetylated. Phytophthora effectors have an RXLR motif that resembles the Plasmodium RXLXE/Q motif and the motifs are functionally interchangeable. What happens to RXLR effectors after removal of the signal peptide is not known. As indicated by the question marks, there is as yet no evidence for further processing, neither for cleavage within the RXLR motif nor for N-acetylation.
Figure 3The . (A) Observed changes in Arabidopsis suspension cells upon exposure to IPI-O. The CW–PM continuum (shown as green vertical bars) is disturbed (dotted vertical bars) when IPI-O has an intact RGD motif (left panel) but when RGD is mutated into RGA or RGE the continuum is not disturbed (middle panel; Senchou et al., 2004). Model depicting the membrane-associated LecRK-I.9 in interaction with a putative RGD-containing extracellular ligand (right panel). Under normal circumstances (wild-type) the CW–PM continuum is in a balanced state. (B) Observed changes in the Arabidopsis phenocopy lines 35S-ipiO1 and lecrk-I.9 (top left and right panel, respectively). Both show gain of susceptibility to Phytophthora brassicae (the gray area on the leaf depicts lesion growth) and reduced callose deposition (shown as blue dots at the cell boundaries). Arabidopsis lines expressing ipiO with a mutated RGD motif (35S-ipiO1RGA or 35S-ipiO1RGE) behave as the wild-type Col-0 accession (lower left and right panel, respectively); no lesion formation upon infection with P. brassicae (the brown dot represents a hypersensitive response) and efficient callose deposition (Bouwmeester et al., 2011). The model predicts that IPI-O competes with the endogenous ligand of LecRK-I.9 leading to less adhesions between CW and PM, and gain of susceptibility. A mutation in the RGD motif abolishes the competition resulting in a wild-type phenotype. In the absence of LecRK-I.9 the proper balance between endogenous ligand and receptor is disturbed and results in gain of susceptibility.