264 research outputs found
mADP-RTs: versatile virulence factors from bacterial pathogens of plants and mammals
Mono ADP-ribosyltransferases (mADP-RTs) are a family of enzymes that cleave NAD+ and covalently attach the ADP-ribosyl moiety to target proteins. mADP-RTs are well established as important virulence factors of bacteria that infect mammals. Cholera toxin, pertussis toxin, and diphtheria toxin are three of the best-known examples of mADP-RTs. They modify host target proteins in order to promote infection and/or killing of the host cell. Despite low sequence similarity at the primary amino acid level, mADP-RTs share a conserved core catalytic fold and structural biology has made important contributions to elucidating how mADP-RTs modify mammalian host targets. Recently, mADP-RTs were shown to be present in plant pathogenic bacteria, suggesting that mADP-RTs are also important virulence factors of plant pathogens. Crystal structures of plant pathogenic bacterial mADP-RTs are also now available. Here we review the structure/function of mADP-RTs from pathogens of mammals and plants, highlighting both commonalities and differences
CPD: Crowd-based Pothole Detection
Potholes and other damages of the road surface constitute a problem being as old as roads are. Still, potholes are widespread and affect the driving comfort of passengers as well as road safety. If one knew about the exact locations of potholes, it would be possible to repair them selectively or at least to warn drivers about them up to their repair. However, both scenarios require their detection and localization. For this purpose, we propose a crowd-based approach that enables as many of the vehicles already driving on our roads as possible to detect potholes and report them to a centralized back-end application. Whereas each single vehicle provides only limited and imprecise information, it is possible to determine these information more precisely when collecting them at a large scale. These more exact information may, for example, be used to warn following vehicles about potholes lying ahead to increase overall safety and comfort. In this work, this idea is examined and an offline executable version of the desired system is implemented. Additionally, the approach is evaluated with a large database of real-world sensor readings from a testing fleet and therefore its feasibility is proved. Our investigation shows that the suggested CPD approach is promising to bring customers a benefit by an improved driving comfort and higher road safety
The superior salinity tolerance of bread wheat cultivar Shanrong No. 3 is unlikely to be caused by elevated Ta-sro1 poly-(ADP-ribose) polymerase activity
Structural and biochemical analyses demonstrate that the elevated salinity tolerance of bread wheat cultivar Shanrong No. 3 is unlikely to be caused by elevated Ta-sro1 poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase activity
Nuclear Import of Arabidopsis Poly(ADP-Ribose) Polymerase 2 Is Mediated by Importin-α and a Nuclear Localization Sequence Located Between the Predicted SAP Domains
Proteins of the Poly(ADP-Ribose) Polymerase (PARP) family modify target proteins by covalent attachment of ADP-ribose moieties onto amino acid side chains. In Arabidopsis, PARP proteins contribute to repair of DNA lesions and modulate plant responses to various abiotic and biotic stressors. Arabidopsis PARP1 and PARP2 are nuclear proteins and given that their molecular weights exceed the diffusion limit of nuclear pore complexes, an active import mechanism into the nucleus is likely. Here we use confocal microscopy of fluorescent protein-tagged Arabidopsis PARP2 and PARP2 deletion constructs in combination with site-directed mutagenesis to identify a nuclear localization sequence in PARP2 that is required for nuclear import. We report that in co-immunoprecipitation assays PARP2 interacts with several isoforms of the importin-α group of nuclear transport adapters and that PARP2 binding to IMPORTIN-α2 is mediated by the identified nuclear localization sequence. Our results demonstrate that PARP2 is a cargo protein of the canonical importin-α/ÎČ nuclear import pathway
Arabidopsis downy mildew effector HaRxL106 suppresses plant immunity by binding to RADICALâINDUCED CELL DEATH1
Summary
- The oomycete pathogen Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis (Hpa) causes downy mildew disease on Arabidopsis. To colonize its host, Hpa translocates effector proteins that suppress plant immunity into infected host cells. Here, we investigate the relevance of the interaction between one of these effectors, HaRxL106, and Arabidopsis RADICALâINDUCED CELL DEATH1 (RCD1).
- We use pathogen infection assays as well as molecular and biochemical analyses to test the hypothesis that HaRxL106 manipulates RCD1 to attenuate transcriptional activation of defense genes.
- We report that HaRxL106 suppresses transcriptional activation of salicylic acid (SA)âinduced defense genes and alters plant growth responses to light. HaRxL106âmediated suppression of immunity is abolished in RCD1 lossâofâfunction mutants. We report that RCD1âtype proteins are phosphorylated, and we identified Mut9âlike kinases (MLKs), which function as phosphoregulatory nodes at the level of photoreceptors, as RCD1âinteracting proteins. An mlk1,3,4 triple mutant exhibits stronger SAâinduced defense marker gene expression compared with wildâtype plants, suggesting that MLKs also affect transcriptional regulation of SA signaling.
- Based on the combined evidence, we hypothesize that nuclear RCD1/MLK complexes act as signaling nodes that integrate information from environmental cues an
Arabidopsis downy mildew effector HaRxL106 suppresses plant immunity by binding to RADICALâINDUCED CELL DEATH1
Summary
- The oomycete pathogen Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis (Hpa) causes downy mildew disease on Arabidopsis. To colonize its host, Hpa translocates effector proteins that suppress plant immunity into infected host cells. Here, we investigate the relevance of the interaction between one of these effectors, HaRxL106, and Arabidopsis RADICALâINDUCED CELL DEATH1 (RCD1).
- We use pathogen infection assays as well as molecular and biochemical analyses to test the hypothesis that HaRxL106 manipulates RCD1 to attenuate transcriptional activation of defense genes.
- We report that HaRxL106 suppresses transcriptional activation of salicylic acid (SA)âinduced defense genes and alters plant growth responses to light. HaRxL106âmediated suppression of immunity is abolished in RCD1 lossâofâfunction mutants. We report that RCD1âtype proteins are phosphorylated, and we identified Mut9âlike kinases (MLKs), which function as phosphoregulatory nodes at the level of photoreceptors, as RCD1âinteracting proteins. An mlk1,3,4 triple mutant exhibits stronger SAâinduced defense marker gene expression compared with wildâtype plants, suggesting that MLKs also affect transcriptional regulation of SA signaling.
- Based on the combined evidence, we hypothesize that nuclear RCD1/MLK complexes act as signaling nodes that integrate information from environmental cues an
Plants flash their KASH
An Arabidopsis root tip expresses GFP-tagged SINE1 (green), one of many new outer nuclear membrane KASH proteins that Zhou et al. identify in plants. The plant cell walls are labeled with propidium iodide (red)
Poly(ADP-ribose)-binding protein RCD1 is a plant PARylation reader regulated by Photoregulatory Protein Kinases
Poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation (PARylation) is a reversible post-translational protein modification that has profound regulatory functions in metabolism, development and immunity, and is conserved throughout the eukaryotic lineage. Contrary to metazoa, many components and mechanistic details of PARylation have remained unidentified in plants. Here we present the transcriptional co-regulator RADICAL-INDUCED CELL DEATH1 (RCD1) as a plant PAR-reader. RCD1 is a multidomain protein with intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) separating its domains. We have reported earlier that RCD1 regulates plant development and stress-tolerance by interacting with numerous transcription factors (TFs) through its C-terminal RST domain. This study suggests that the N-terminal WWE and PARP-like domains, as well as the connecting IDR play an important regulatory role for RCD1 function. We show that RCD1 binds PAR in vitro via its WWE domain and that PAR-binding determines RCD1 localization to nuclear bodies (NBs) in vivo. Additionally, we found that RCD1 function and stability is controlled by Photoregulatory Protein Kinases (PPKs). PPKs localize with RCD1 in NBs and phosphorylate RCD1 at multiple sites affecting its stability. This work proposes a mechanism for negative transcriptional regulation in plants, in which RCD1 localizes to NBs, binds TFs with its RST domain and is degraded after phosphorylation by PPKs
Probing formation of cargo/importin-α transport complexes in plant cells using a pathogen effector
Importin-αs are essential adapter proteins that recruit cytoplasmic proteins destined for active nuclear import to the nuclear transport machinery. Cargo proteins interact with the importin-α armadillo repeat domain via nuclear localization sequences (NLSs), short amino acids motifs enriched in Lys and Arg residues. Plant genomes typically encode several importin-α paralogs that can have both specific and partially redundant functions. Although some cargos are preferentially imported by a distinct importin-α it remains unknown how this specificity is generated and to what extent cargos compete for binding to nuclear transport receptors. Here we report that the effector protein HaRxL106 from the oomycete pathogen Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis co-opts the host cell's nuclear import machinery. We use HaRxL106 as a probe to determine redundant and specific functions of importin-α paralogs from Arabidopsis thaliana. A crystal structure of the importin-α3/MOS6 armadillo repeat domain suggests that five of the six Arabidopsis importin-αs expressed in rosette leaves have an almost identical NLS-binding site. Comparison of the importin-α binding affinities of HaRxL106 and other cargos in vitro and in plant cells suggests that relatively small affinity differences in vitro affect the rate of transport complex formation in vivo. Our results suggest that cargo affinity for importin-α, sequence variation at the importin-α NLS-binding sites and tissue-specific expression levels of importin-αs determine formation of cargo/importin-α transport complexes in plant cells
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