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A family of bacterial cysteine protease type III effectors utilizes acylation-dependent and -independent strategies to localize to plasma membranes.

The Journal of biological chemistry | 2009

Bacterial phytopathogens employ a type III secretion system to deliver effector proteins into the plant cell to suppress defense pathways; however, the molecular mechanisms and subcellular localization strategies that drive effector function largely remain a mystery. Here, we demonstrate that the plant plasma membrane is the primary site for subcellular localization of the Pseudomonas syringae effector AvrPphB and five additional cysteine protease family members. AvrPphB and two AvrPphB-like effectors, ORF4 and NopT, autoproteolytically process following delivery into the plant cell to expose embedded sites for fatty acylation. Host-dependent lipidation of these three effectors directs plasma membrane localization and is required for the avirulence activity of AvrPphB. Surprisingly, the AvrPphB-like effectors RipT, HopC1, and HopN1 utilize an acylation-independent mechanism to localize to the cellular plasma membrane. Although some AvrPphB-like effectors employ acylation-independent localization strategies, others hijack the eukaryotic lipidation machinery to ensure plasma membrane localization, illustrating the diverse tactics employed by type III effectors to target specific subcellular compartments.

Pubmed ID: 19346252 RIS Download

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Associated grants

  • Agency: NIAID NIH HHS, United States
    Id: R01 AI060662
  • Agency: NIGMS NIH HHS, United States
    Id: T32 GM007752
  • Agency: NIGMS NIH HHS, United States
    Id: 2 T32GM07752-25

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Amplify (tool)

RRID:SCR_002956

A freeware Macintosh program for simulating and testing polymerase chain reactions (PCRs) that can also be used as a tool for designing primers by evaluating candidates. It's a program to simulate the polymerase chain reaction. You specify a target sequence and primers, and it predicts the result. It's useful for planning experiments, testing primers and teaching about PCR. Amplify draws a diagram of the predicted results showing all expected primer matches and amplified fragments. Clicking on any of these objects gives additional information about them.

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