Variation and inheritance of the Xanthomonas raxX-raxSTAB gene cluster required for activation of XA21-mediated immunity

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Authors

Liu, Furong
McDonald, Megan
Schwessinger, Benjamin
Joe, Anna
Pruitt, Rory
Erickson, Teresa
Zhao, Xiuxiang
Stewart, Valley
Ronald, Pamela

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Wiley

Abstract

The rice XA21-mediated immune response is activated on recog-nition of the RaxX peptide produced by the bacterium Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo). The 60-residue RaxX pre-cursor is post-translationally modified to form a sulfated tyrosine peptide that shares sequence and functional similarity with the plant sulfated tyrosine (PSY) peptide hormones. The 5-kb raxX-raxSTAB gene cluster of Xoo encodes RaxX, the RaxST tyrosyl-protein sulfotransferase, and the RaxA and RaxB components of a predicted type I secretion system. To assess raxX-raxSTAB gene cluster evolution and to determine its phylogenetic distribution, we first identified rax gene homologues in other genomes. We detected the complete raxX-raxSTAB gene cluster only in Xanthomonas spp., in five distinct lineages in addition to X.ory-zae. The phylogenetic distribution of the raxX-raxSTAB gene cluster is consistent with the occurrence of multiple lateral (hori-zontal) gene transfer events during Xanthomonas speciation. RaxX natural variants contain a restricted set of missense substi-tutions, as expected if selection acts to maintain peptide hor-mone-like function. Indeed, eight RaxX variants tested all failed to activate the XA21-mediated immune response, yet retained peptide hormone activity. Together, these observations support the hypothesis that the XA21 receptor evolved specifically to rec-ognize Xoo RaxX.

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Molecular Plant Pathology

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Open Access

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Creative Commons Attribution License

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