Many gram-negative pathogenic bacteria use type III effector proteins (T3Es) as essential virulence factors to suppress host immunity and to cause disease. However, in many cases the molecular function of T3Es remains unknown. The plant pathogen Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria (Xcv) is the causal agent of bacterial spot disease on tomato and pepper plants and is known to translocate around 36 T3Es into its host cell, which collectively suppress plant defence and promote infection. XopM is an Xcv core T3E with unknown function that has no similarity to any other known protein. We found that XopM interacts with vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP)-associated proteins (VAPs) in an isoform-specific manner. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) integral membrane protein VAP is a common component of membrane contact sites involved in both tethering and lipid transfer by binding directly to proteins containing an FFAT (two phenylalanines [FF] in an acidic tract [AT]) motif. Sequence analyses revealed that XopM displays two FFAT motifs that cooperatively mediated the interaction of XopM with VAP. When expressed in plants, XopM supported growth of a nonpathogenic bacterial strain and dampened the production of reactive oxygen species, indicating its ability to suppress plant immunity. Further analyses revealed that the interaction with VAP and the ability to suppress microbe-associated molecular pattern-triggered immunity (MTI) are structurally and functionally separable, although XopM requires localisation to the host membrane system for full MTI suppression activity. We discuss a working model in which XopM uses FFAT motifs to target the membrane to interfere with early MTI responses.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mpp.70038 | DOI Listing |
Mol Plant Pathol
December 2024
Plant Metabolism Group, Leibniz-Institute of Vegetable and Ornamental Crops (IGZ), Großbeeren, Germany.
Phytopathology
November 2023
Department of Plant Pathology, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND 58108, U.S.A.
contains a group of bacterial pathogens that are closely related and have been divided into several pathovars based on their host range. pv. (Xtu) and pv.
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November 2017
IRHS, Agrocampus-Ouest, INRA, Université d'Angers, SFR 4207 QuaSaV, Beaucouzé, France.
is the causal agent of bacterial leaf streak, the most common bacterial disease of wheat and barley. To cause disease, most xanthomonads depend on a highly conserved type III secretion system, which translocates type III effectors into host plant cells. Mutagenesis of the conserved type III secretion gene confirmed that the type III secretion system is required to cause disease on the host plant barley and to trigger a non-host hypersensitive response (HR) in pepper leaves.
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