Transcriptional Programming and Functional Interactions within the<i>Phytophthora sojae</i>RXLR Effector Repertoire    

Qunqing Wang(Nanjing Agricultural University), Changzhi Han(Nanjing Agricultural University), Adriana Ferreira(Virginia Tech), Xiaoli Yu(Nanjing Agricultural University), Wenwu Ye(Nanjing Agricultural University), Sucheta Tripathy(Virginia Tech), Shiv D. Kale(Virginia Tech), Biao Gu(MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology), Yuting Sheng(Nanjing Agricultural University), Yangyang Sui(Nanjing Agricultural University), Xiaoli Wang(Nanjing Agricultural University), Zhengguang Zhang(Nanjing Agricultural University), Baoping Cheng(Nanjing Agricultural University), Suomeng Dong(Nanjing Agricultural University), Weixing Shan(MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology), Xiaobo Zheng(Nanjing Agricultural University), Daolong Dou(Nanjing Agricultural University), Brett M. Tyler(Virginia Tech), Yuanchao Wang(Nanjing Agricultural University)
The Plant Cell
June 1, 2011
Cited by 462Open Access
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Abstract

The genome of the soybean pathogen Phytophthora sojae contains nearly 400 genes encoding candidate effector proteins carrying the host cell entry motif RXLR-dEER. Here, we report a broad survey of the transcription, variation, and functions of a large sample of the P. sojae candidate effectors. Forty-five (12%) effector genes showed high levels of polymorphism among P. sojae isolates and significant evidence for positive selection. Of 169 effectors tested, most could suppress programmed cell death triggered by BAX, effectors, and/or the PAMP INF1, while several triggered cell death themselves. Among the most strongly expressed effectors, one immediate-early class was highly expressed even prior to infection and was further induced 2- to 10-fold following infection. A second early class, including several that triggered cell death, was weakly expressed prior to infection but induced 20- to 120-fold during the first 12 h of infection. The most strongly expressed immediate-early effectors could suppress the cell death triggered by several early effectors, and most early effectors could suppress INF1-triggered cell death, suggesting the two classes of effectors may target different functional branches of the defense response. In support of this hypothesis, misexpression of key immediate-early and early effectors severely reduced the virulence of P. sojae transformants.


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