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The Phytophthora infestans AVR2 Effector Escapes R2 Recognition Through Effector Disordering.

Li-Na YangHao LiuGuo-Hua DuanYan-Mei HuangShiting LiuZhi-Guo FangE-Jiao WuLiping ShangJiasui Zhan
Published in: Molecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI (2020)
Intrinsic disorder is a common structural characteristic of proteins and a central player in the biochemical processes of species. However, the role of intrinsic disorder in the evolution of plant-pathogen interactions is rarely investigated. Here, we explored the role of intrinsic disorder in the development of the pathogenicity in the RXLR AVR2 effector of Phytophthora infestans. We found AVR2 exhibited high nucleotide diversity generated by point mutation, early-termination, altered start codon, deletion/insertion, and intragenic recombination and is predicted to be an intrinsically disordered protein. AVR2 amino acid sequences conferring a virulent phenotype had a higher disorder tendency in both the N- and C-terminal regions compared with sequences conferring an avirulent phenotype. In addition, we also found virulent AVR2 mutants gained one or two short linear interaction motifs, the critical components of disordered proteins required for protein-protein interactions. Furthermore, virulent AVR2 mutants were predicted to be unstable and have a short protein half-life. Taken together, these results support the notion that intrinsic disorder is important for the effector function of pathogens and demonstrate that SLiM-mediated protein-protein interaction in the C-terminal effector domain might contribute greatly to the evasion of resistance-protein detection in P. infestans.
Keyphrases
  • protein protein
  • amino acid
  • regulatory t cells
  • dendritic cells
  • small molecule
  • type iii
  • escherichia coli
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • neural network
  • loop mediated isothermal amplification
  • sensitive detection