AI Article Synopsis

  • Ralstonia solanacearum, a plant pathogenic bacterium, uses a type III secretion system to inject over 70 effector proteins into host plants, manipulating their defense systems.
  • The effector RipAY/RSp1022, which has γ-glutamyl cyclotransferase (GGCT) activity, degrades glutathione, a key antioxidant in plant cells, affecting the plant's ability to defend itself.
  • Interestingly, RipAY only shows its GGCT activity when interacting with eukaryotic proteins, indicating it has adapted to sense and respond to the host's internal redox state to promote infection.

Article Abstract

The plant pathogenic bacterium Ralstonia solanacearum injects more than 70 effector proteins (virulence factors) into the host plant cells via the needle-like structure of a type III secretion system. The type III secretion system effector proteins manipulate host regulatory networks to suppress defense responses with diverse molecular activities. Uncovering the molecular function of these effectors is essential for a mechanistic understanding of R. solanacearum pathogenicity. However, few of the effectors from R. solanacearum have been functionally characterized, and their plant targets remain largely unknown. Here, we show that the ChaC domain-containing effector RipAY/RSp1022 from R. solanacearum exhibits γ-glutamyl cyclotransferase (GGCT) activity to degrade the major intracellular redox buffer, glutathione. Heterologous expression of RipAY, but not other ChaC family proteins conserved in various organisms, caused growth inhibition of yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and the intracellular glutathione level was decreased to ∼30% of the normal level following expression of RipAY in yeast. Although active site mutants of GGCT activity were non-toxic, the addition of glutathione did not reverse the toxicity, suggesting that the toxicity might be a consequence of activity against other γ-glutamyl compounds. Intriguingly, RipAY protein purified from a bacterial expression system did not exhibit any GGCT activity, whereas it exhibited robust GGCT activity upon its interaction with eukaryotic thioredoxins, which are important for intracellular redox homeostasis during bacterial infection in plants. Our results suggest that RipAY has evolved to sense the host intracellular redox environment, which triggers its enzymatic activity to create a favorable environment for R. solanacearum infection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4807269PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M115.678953DOI Listing

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