4.7 Article

Agrobacterium VirE2 Protein Modulates Plant Gene Expression and Mediates Transformation From Its Location Outside the Nucleus

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.684192

Keywords

Agrobacterium; Arabidopsis; plant transformation; VirE2; protein subcellular localization; transcriptome; proteome

Categories

Funding

  1. Purdue University (Frederick N. Andrews Graduate Assistantship)
  2. National Science Foundation
  3. P30 grant [CA023168]
  4. Purdue University (Purdue Research Foundation Graduate Award)
  5. Purdue University (Bilsland Dissertation Fellowship)

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VirE2, an effector protein of Agrobacterium, plays a crucial role in plant transformation by coating and protecting transferred DNA in the plant cytoplasm. Plant-expressed VirE2 can complement a virE2 mutant strain, but nuclear-localized VirE2 cannot stimulate transformation. VirE2 modulates plant RNA and protein levels to facilitate transformation.
Agrobacterium effector protein VirE2 is important for plant transformation. VirE2 likely coats transferred DNA (T-DNA) in the plant cell and protects it from degradation. VirE2 localizes to the plant cytoplasm and interacts with several host proteins. Plant-expressed VirE2 can complement a virE2 mutant Agrobacterium strain to support transformation. We investigated whether VirE2 could facilitate transformation from a nuclear location by affixing to it a strong nuclear localization signal (NLS) sequence. Only cytoplasmic-, but not nuclear-localized, VirE2 could stimulate transformation. To investigate the ways VirE2 supports transformation, we generated transgenic Arabidopsis plants containing a virE2 gene under the control of an inducible promoter and performed RNA-seq and proteomic analyses before and after induction. Some differentially expressed plant genes were previously known to facilitate transformation. Knockout mutant lines of some other VirE2 differentially expressed genes showed altered transformation phenotypes. Levels of some proteins known to be important for transformation increased in response to VirE2 induction, but prior to or without induction of their corresponding mRNAs. Overexpression of some other genes whose proteins increased after VirE2 induction resulted in increased transformation susceptibility. We conclude that cytoplasmically localized VirE2 modulates both plant RNA and protein levels to facilitate transformation.

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