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TIR domains of plant immune receptors are NAD+-cleaving enzymes that promote cell death

Authors :
National Science Foundation (US)
National Institutes of Health (US)
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
University of Colorado
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
Two Blades Foundation
Wan, Li
Essuman, Kow
Anderson, Ryan G.
Sasaki, Yo
Monteiro, Freddy
Chung, Eui-Hwan
Osborne Nishimura, Erin
DiAntonio, Aaron
Milbrandt, Jeffrey
Dangl, Jeffery L.
Nishimura, Marc T.
National Science Foundation (US)
National Institutes of Health (US)
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
University of Colorado
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
Two Blades Foundation
Wan, Li
Essuman, Kow
Anderson, Ryan G.
Sasaki, Yo
Monteiro, Freddy
Chung, Eui-Hwan
Osborne Nishimura, Erin
DiAntonio, Aaron
Milbrandt, Jeffrey
Dangl, Jeffery L.
Nishimura, Marc T.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Plant nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat (NLR) immune receptors activate cell death and confer disease resistance by unknown mechanisms. We demonstrate that plant Toll/interleukin-1 receptor (TIR) domains of NLRs are enzymes capable of degrading nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide in its oxidized form (NAD+). Both cell death induction and NAD+ cleavage activity of plant TIR domains require known self-association interfaces and a putative catalytic glutamic acid that is conserved in both bacterial TIR NAD+-cleaving enzymes (NADases) and the mammalian SARM1 (sterile alpha and TIR motif containing 1) NADase. We identify a variant of cyclic adenosine diphosphate ribose as a biomarker of TIR enzymatic activity. TIR enzymatic activity is induced by pathogen recognition and functions upstream of the genes enhanced disease susceptibility 1 (EDS1) and N requirement gene 1 (NRG1), which encode regulators required for TIR immune function. Thus, plant TIR-NLR receptors require NADase function to transduce recognition of pathogens into a cell death response.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1286543254
Document Type :
Electronic Resource