| Literature DB >> 26355215 |
Guoxun Wang1, Brice Roux2, Feng Feng1, Endrick Guy2, Lin Li3, Nannan Li3, Xiaojuan Zhang1, Martine Lautier4, Marie-Françoise Jardinaud5, Matthieu Chabannes2, Matthieu Arlat4, She Chen3, Chaozu He6, Laurent D Noël7, Jian-Min Zhou8.
Abstract
In plants, host response to pathogenic microbes is driven both by microbial perception and detection of modified-self. The Xanthomonas campestris effector protein AvrAC/XopAC uridylylates the Arabidopsis BIK1 kinase to dampen basal resistance and thereby promotes bacterial virulence. Here we show that PBL2, a paralog of BIK1, is similarly uridylylated by AvrAC. However, in contrast to BIK1, PBL2 uridylylation is specifically required for host recognition of AvrAC to trigger immunity, but not AvrAC virulence. PBL2 thus acts as a decoy and enables AvrAC detection. AvrAC recognition also requires the RKS1 pseudokinase of the ZRK family and the NOD-like receptor ZAR1, which is known to recognize the Pseudomonas syringae effector HopZ1a. ZAR1 forms a stable complex with RKS1, which specifically recruits PBL2 when the latter is uridylylated by AvrAC, triggering ZAR1-mediated immunity. The results illustrate how decoy substrates and pseudokinases can specify and expand the capacity of the plant immune system.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26355215 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2015.08.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 21.023