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Pseudomonas syringae Effector AvrPphB Suppresses AvrB-Induced Activation of RPM1 but Not AvrRpm1-Induced Activation
Journal article

Pseudomonas syringae Effector AvrPphB Suppresses AvrB-Induced Activation of RPM1 but Not AvrRpm1-Induced Activation

Andrew R Russell, Tom Ashfield and Roger W Innes
Molecular plant-microbe interactions, Vol.28(6), pp.727-735
06/2015
PMID: 25625821

Abstract

Amino Acid Sequence Arabidopsis - enzymology Arabidopsis - genetics Arabidopsis - immunology Arabidopsis - microbiology Arabidopsis Proteins - genetics Arabidopsis Proteins - metabolism Bacterial Proteins - genetics Bacterial Proteins - metabolism Carrier Proteins - genetics Carrier Proteins - metabolism Gene Expression Regulation, Plant Models, Biological Molecular Sequence Data Plant Diseases - immunology Plant Diseases - microbiology Plant Leaves - enzymology Plant Leaves - genetics Plant Leaves - immunology Plant Leaves - microbiology Plants, Genetically Modified Protein Kinases - genetics Protein Kinases - metabolism Pseudomonas syringae - genetics Pseudomonas syringae - growth & development Pseudomonas syringae - metabolism Sequence Alignment Soybeans - enzymology Soybeans - genetics Soybeans - immunology Soybeans - microbiology Tobacco - genetics Tobacco - immunology Tobacco - microbiology Transgenes Mutation Phosphorylation Signal Transduction
The Pseudomonas syringae effector AvrB triggers a hypersensitive resistance response in Arabidopsis and soybean plants expressing the disease resistance (R) proteins RPM1 and Rpg1b, respectively. In Arabidopsis, AvrB induces RPM1-interacting protein kinase (RIPK) to phosphorylate a disease regulator known as RIN4, which subsequently activates RPM1-mediated defenses. Here, we show that AvrPphB can suppress activation of RPM1 by AvrB and this suppression is correlated with the cleavage of RIPK by AvrPphB. Significantly, AvrPphB does not suppress activation of RPM1 by AvrRpm1, suggesting that RIPK is not required for AvrRpm1-induced modification of RIN4. This observation indicates that AvrB and AvrRpm1 recognition is mediated by different mechanisms in Arabidopsis, despite their recognition being determined by a single R protein. Moreover, AvrB recognition but not AvrRpm1 recognition is suppressed by AvrPphB in soybean, suggesting that AvrB recognition requires a similar molecular mechanism in soybean and Arabidopsis. In support of this, we found that phosphodeficient mutations in the soybean GmRIN4a and GmRIN4b proteins are sufficient to block Rpg1b-mediated hypersensitive response in transient assays in Nicotiana glutinosa. Taken together, our results indicate that AvrB and AvrPphB target a conserved defense signaling pathway in Arabidopsis and soybean that includes RIPK and RIN4.

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