The effector AvrRxo1 phosphorylates NAD in planta

Gram-negative bacterial pathogens of plants and animals employ type III secreted effectors to suppress innate immunity. Most characterized effectors work through modification of host proteins or transcriptional regulators, although a few are known to modify small molecule targets. The Xanthomonas ty...

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Published inPLoS pathogens Vol. 13; no. 6; p. e1006442
Main Authors Shidore, Teja, Broeckling, Corey D, Kirkwood, Jay S, Long, John J, Miao, Jiamin, Zhao, Bingyu, Leach, Jan E, Triplett, Lindsay R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 19.06.2017
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:Gram-negative bacterial pathogens of plants and animals employ type III secreted effectors to suppress innate immunity. Most characterized effectors work through modification of host proteins or transcriptional regulators, although a few are known to modify small molecule targets. The Xanthomonas type III secreted avirulence factor AvrRxo1 is a structural homolog of the zeta toxin family of sugar-nucleotide kinases that suppresses bacterial growth. AvrRxo1 was recently reported to phosphorylate the central metabolite and signaling molecule NAD in vitro, suggesting that the effector might enhance bacterial virulence on plants through manipulation of primary metabolic pathways. In this study, we determine that AvrRxo1 phosphorylates NAD in planta, and that its kinase catalytic sites are necessary for its toxic and resistance-triggering phenotypes. A global metabolomics approach was used to independently identify 3'-NADP as the sole detectable product of AvrRxo1 expression in yeast and bacteria, and NAD kinase activity was confirmed in vitro. 3'-NADP accumulated upon transient expression of AvrRxo1 in Nicotiana benthamiana and in rice leaves infected with avrRxo1-expressing strains of X. oryzae. Mutation of the catalytic aspartic acid residue D193 abolished AvrRxo1 kinase activity and several phenotypes of AvrRxo1, including toxicity in yeast, bacteria, and plants, suppression of the flg22-triggered ROS burst, and ability to trigger an R gene-mediated hypersensitive response. A mutation in the Walker A ATP-binding motif abolished the toxicity of AvrRxo1, but did not abolish the 3'-NADP production, virulence enhancement, ROS suppression, or HR-triggering phenotypes of AvrRxo1. These results demonstrate that a type III effector targets the central metabolite and redox carrier NAD in planta, and that this catalytic activity is required for toxicity and suppression of the ROS burst.
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Conceptualization: LRT CDB TS.Data curation: CDB JSK TS.Formal analysis: CDB JSK TS.Funding acquisition: LRT JEL.Investigation: TS JSK CDB JJL JM LRT.Methodology: TS JSK CDB LRT.Project administration: LRT.Resources: JM BZ.Supervision: LRT CDB.Visualization: TS CDB.Writing – original draft: TS CDB LRT.Writing – review & editing: TS JSK CDB JJL BZ JEL LRT.
The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
ISSN:1553-7374
1553-7366
1553-7374
DOI:10.1371/journal.ppat.1006442