Back to Search Start Over

The rice immune receptor XA21 recognizes a tyrosine-sulfated protein from a Gram-negative bacterium

Authors :
Christopher J. Petzold
Nicholas Thomas
Rory N Pruitt
Prabhu B. Patil
Daniel F. Caddell
Jennifer S. Brodbelt
Joshua L. Heazlewood
Dee Dee Luu
Pamela C. Ronald
Markus Albert
Dipali Majumder
Samriti Midha
Deling Ruan
Benjamin Schwessinger
Ofir Bahar
Georg Felix
Hubert Kalbacher
Ramesh V. Sonti
Chang C. Liu
Weiguo Zhang
Anna Joe
Arsalan Daudi
Leanne Jade G. Chan
David De Vleesschauwer
Huamin Chen
Xiang Li
Mawsheng Chern
Michelle R. Robinson
Furong Liu
Xiuxiang Zhao
Source :
Science Advances, Science advances, vol 1, iss 6
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2015.

Abstract

A sulfated peptide activates a rice immune receptor.<br />Surveillance of the extracellular environment by immune receptors is of central importance to eukaryotic survival. The rice receptor kinase XA21, which confers robust resistance to most strains of the Gram-negative bacterium Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo), is representative of a large class of cell surface immune receptors in plants and animals. We report the identification of a previously undescribed Xoo protein, called RaxX, which is required for activation of XA21-mediated immunity. Xoo strains that lack RaxX, or carry mutations in the single RaxX tyrosine residue (Y41), are able to evade XA21-mediated immunity. Y41 of RaxX is sulfated by the prokaryotic tyrosine sulfotransferase RaxST. Sulfated, but not nonsulfated, RaxX triggers hallmarks of the plant immune response in an XA21-dependent manner. A sulfated, 21–amino acid synthetic RaxX peptide (RaxX21-sY) is sufficient for this activity. Xoo field isolates that overcome XA21-mediated immunity encode an alternate raxX allele, suggesting that coevolutionary interactions between host and pathogen contribute to RaxX diversification. RaxX is highly conserved in many plant pathogenic Xanthomonas species. The new insights gained from the discovery and characterization of the sulfated protein, RaxX, can be applied to the development of resistant crop varieties and therapeutic reagents that have the potential to block microbial infection of both plants and animals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23752548
Volume :
1
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....71961785095d6323f661695fc05fb5f9