Abstract

Bacterial plant pathogens manipulate their hosts by injection of numerous effector proteins into host cells via type III secretion systems. Recognition of these effectors by the host plant leads to the induction of a defense reaction that often culminates in a hypersensitive response manifested as cell death. Genes encoding effector proteins can be exchanged between different strains of bacteria via horizontal transfer, and often individual strains are capable of infecting multiple hosts. Host plant species express diverse repertoires of resistance proteins that mediate direct or indirect recognition of bacterial effectors. As a result, plants and their bacterial pathogens should be considered as two extensive coevolving groups rather than as individual host species coevolving with single pathovars. To dissect the complexity of this coevolution, we cloned 171 effector-encoding genes from several pathovars of Pseudomonas and Ralstonia. We used Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transient assays to test the ability of each effector to induce a necrotic phenotype on 59 plant genotypes belonging to four plant families, including numerous diverse accessions of lettuce (Lactuca sativa) and tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). Known defense-inducing effectors (avirulence factors) and their homologs commonly induced extensive necrosis in many different plant species. Nonhost species reacted to multiple effector proteins from an individual pathovar more frequently and more intensely than host species. Both homologous and sequence-unrelated effectors could elicit necrosis in a similar spectrum of plants, suggesting common effector targets or targeting of the same pathways in the plant cell.

Highlights

  • Bacterial plant pathogens manipulate their hosts by injection of numerous effector proteins into host cells via type III secretion systems

  • Reactions to 171 effector and other pathogenicityrelated proteins were tested in 59 plant accessions to assay interspecific and intraspecific diversity for the elicitation of a phenotypic response, necrosis

  • We cloned a limited number of genes encoding confirmed and putative effector proteins from other strains of Pseudomonas and Ralstonia (Table I; Supplemental Table S1)

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Summary

Introduction

Bacterial plant pathogens manipulate their hosts by injection of numerous effector proteins into host cells via type III secretion systems. Host plant species express diverse repertoires of resistance proteins that mediate direct or indirect recognition of bacterial effectors. Plants have countered the pathogen’s virulence actions by evolving the ability to directly or indirectly detect the activities of effectors (for review, see Chisholm et al, 2006; Bent and Mackey, 2007). Such recognition results in effector-triggered immunity (ETI) and is mediated predominantly by intracellular nucleotidebinding site-Leu-rich repeat (NBS-LRR) proteins that have often been identified as monogenic R genes. There are few data currently available that document resistance mediated by recognition of individual effectors among diverse plant species (e.g. Ashfield et al, 2004; Kuang et al, 2006)

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