N-terminal motifs in some plant disease resistance proteins function in membrane attachment and contribute to disease resistance
Loading...
Date
Authors
Takemoto, Daigo
Rafiqi, Maryam
Hurley, Ursula
Lawrence, Greg J
Bernoux, Maud
Hardham, Adrienne R
Ellis, Jeffrey G
Dodds, Peter N
Jones, David A
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Phytopathological Society
Abstract
To investigate the role of N-terminal domains of plant disease resistance proteins in membrane targeting, the N termini of a number of Arabidopsis and flax disease resistance proteins were fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP) and the fusion proteins localized in planta using confocal microscopy. The N termini of the Arabidopsis RPP1-WsB and RPS5 resistance proteins and the PBS1 protein, which is required for RPS5 resistance, targeted GFP to the plasma membrane, and mutation of predicted myristoylation and potential palmitoylation sites resulted in a shift to nucleocytosolic
localization. The N-terminal domain of the membrane-attached Arabidopsis RPS2 resistance protein was targeted incompletely to the plasma membrane. In contrast, the N-terminal domains of the Arabidopsis RPP1-WsA and flax L6 and M resistance proteins, which carry predicted signal anchors, were targeted to the endomembrane system, RPP1-WsA to the endoplasmic reticulum and the
Golgi apparatus, L6 to the Golgi apparatus, and M to the tonoplast. Full-length L6 was also targeted to the Golgi apparatus. Site-directed mutagenesis of six nonconserved
amino acid residues in the signal anchor domains of L6 and M was used to change the localization of the L6 N-terminal fusion protein to that of M and vice versa, showing
that these residues control the targeting specificity of the signal anchor. Replacement of the signal anchor domain of
L6 by that of M did not affect L6 protein accumulation or resistance against flax rust expressing AvrL567 but removal of the signal anchor domain reduced L6 protein accumulation
and L6 resistance, suggesting that membrane attachment is required to stabilize the L6 protein.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions 25. 3 (2012): 379-392
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Funding information: Funding for part of this work was provided by the Australian Research Council (Discovery Project grants DP0771374 and DP1093850).