4.5 Article

Remote homology clustering identifies lowly conserved families of effector proteins in plant- pathogenic fungi

Journal

MICROBIAL GENOMICS
Volume 7, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/mgen.0.000637

Keywords

effector; fungi; pathogen; protein family; protein function

Funding

  1. Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship
  2. Grains and Research Development Corporation (GRDC)
  3. Curtin University [CUR00023]

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Fungal plant diseases are typically initiated by molecular interactions between effector molecules released by pathogens and receptor molecules on or within the plant host cell, with these interactions directly determining host resistance or susceptibility. A novel comparison method called RemEff is capable of identifying protein families with greater sensitivity than traditional homology-inference methods, enabling the prediction of novel fungal effector candidates through protein family association.
Plant diseases caused by fungal pathogens are typically initiated by molecular interactions between 'effector' molecules released by a pathogen and receptor molecules on or within the plant host cell. In many cases these effector-receptor interactions directly determine host resistance or susceptibility. The search for fungal effector proteins is a developing area in fungal plant pathology, with more than 165 distinct confirmed fungal effector proteins in the public domain. For a small number of these, novel effectors can be rapidly discovered across multiple fungal species through the identification of known effector homologues. However, many have no detectable homology by standard sequence based search methods. This study employs a novel comparison method (RemEff) that is capable of identifying protein families with greater sensitivity than traditional homology-inference methods, leveraging a growing pool of confirmed fungal effector data to enable the prediction of novel fungal effector candidates by protein family association. Resources relating to the RemEff method and data used in this study are available from https://figshare.com/projects/Effector_protein_remote_homology/87965.

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