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What the Wild Things Do: Mechanisms of Plant Host Manipulation by Bacterial Type III-Secreted Effector Proteins

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9051029

Keywords

type III secreted effector; biochemical activity; Pseudomonas syringae; Ralstonia; Xanthomonas; virulence promotion; effector-triggered immunity; host activation; host targets

Categories

Funding

  1. USDA [ARS 2030-21000-046-00D, 2030-21000-050-00D]
  2. NSF Directorate for Biological Sciences [IOS-1557661]
  3. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program

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Phytopathogenic bacteria use T3SS to deliver T3SEs, which interact with host targets to attenuate immune signaling. T3SEs have diverse biochemical activities and can be difficult to predict without structural data, and some T3SEs are activated following injection into host cells.
Phytopathogenic bacteria possess an arsenal of effector proteins that enable them to subvert host recognition and manipulate the host to promote pathogen fitness. The type III secretion system (T3SS) delivers type III-secreted effector proteins (T3SEs) from bacterial pathogens such as Pseudomonas syringae, Ralstonia solanacearum, and various Xanthomonas species. These T3SEs interact with and modify a range of intracellular host targets to alter their activity and thereby attenuate host immune signaling. Pathogens have evolved T3SEs with diverse biochemical activities, which can be difficult to predict in the absence of structural data. Interestingly, several T3SEs are activated following injection into the host cell. Here, we review T3SEs with documented enzymatic activities, as well as T3SEs that facilitate virulence-promoting processes either indirectly or through non-enzymatic mechanisms. We discuss the mechanisms by which T3SEs are activated in the cell, as well as how T3SEs modify host targets to promote virulence or trigger immunity. These mechanisms may suggest common enzymatic activities and convergent targets that could be manipulated to protect crop plants from infection.

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