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First published online September 14, 2007; 10.1105/tpc.107.053611 The Plant Cell 19:2898-2912 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists Crystal Structures of Flax Rust Avirulence Proteins AvrL567-A and -D Reveal Details of the Structural Basis for Flax Disease Resistance Specificity[W] ara,b,1,2 tjan Kobea,b,f,5a School of Molecular and Microbial Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia b Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia c Division of Plant Industry, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia d School of Molecular and Microbial Biosciences, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia e School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University of South Australia, Adelaide 5001, Australia f Special Research Centre for Functional and Applied Genomics, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia 5 Address correspondence to peter.dodds{at}csiro.au or b.kobe{at}uq.edu.au.
The gene-for-gene mechanism of plant disease resistance involves direct or indirect recognition of pathogen avirulence (Avr) proteins by plant resistance (R) proteins. Flax rust (Melampsora lini) AvrL567 avirulence proteins and the corresponding flax (Linum usitatissimum) L5, L6, and L7 resistance proteins interact directly. We determined the three-dimensional structures of two members of the AvrL567 family, AvrL567-A and AvrL567-D, at 1.4- and 2.3-Å resolution, respectively. The structures of both proteins are very similar and reveal a ß-sandwich fold with no close known structural homologs. The polymorphic residues in the AvrL567 family map to the surface of the protein, and polymorphisms in residues associated with recognition differences for the R proteins lead to significant changes in surface chemical properties. Analysis of single amino acid substitutions in AvrL567 proteins confirm the role of individual residues in conferring differences in recognition and suggest that the specificity results from the cumulative effects of multiple amino acid contacts. The structures also provide insights into possible pathogen-associated functions of AvrL567 proteins, with nucleic acid binding activity demonstrated in vitro. Our studies provide some of the first structural information on avirulence proteins that bind directly to the corresponding resistance proteins, allowing an examination of the molecular basis of the interaction with the resistance proteins as a step toward designing new resistance specificities.
Plants have evolved a complex multilayered defense system to fight pathogens (Jones and Takemoto, 2004
Although R proteins can impart resistance to a broad range of pathogens, most can be categorized into two main classes based on their domain structure (Dangl and Jones, 2001
Resistance proteins can function either by interacting directly with the corresponding Avr protein (the receptor-ligand model) or by sensing specific alterations in the plant that result from the action of Avr proteins (the guard hypothesis) (Jones and Takemoto, 2004
Because R proteins trigger a complex response, including the HR, they need to be tightly regulated. In the absence of an Avr protein, they are therefore likely to be kept in an inactive form either through intramolecular interactions (cis-repression) (Moffett et al., 2002
Pathogens are under evolutionary pressure to evolve diverse Avr proteins that do not induce a resistance response but maintain their core function in the pathogen life cycle. Different effectors do not appear to share common structural features and are thought to perform diverse functions in the host cell. Bacterial Avr proteins are usually delivered directly into the plant cytoplasm via a type III secretion system (Lahaye and Bonas, 2001
Rust fungi cause disease on many important crop plants, such as cereals and soybean (Glycine max). They are obligate biotrophs that grow only on living plant tissue. In flax (Linum usitatissimum), at least 31 rust resistance specificities to different flax rust (Melampsora lini) strains have been identified, and they are distributed among five polymorphic loci, K, L, M, N, and P (Islam and Mayo, 1990
Several Avr gene families have been cloned from flax rust (Dodds et al., 2004
To understand the specificity of the resistance response by different AvrL567 proteins and to obtain clues about their presumed pathogenicity-associated functions, we determined the three-dimensional structures of two AvrL567 variants with different recognition specificities, AvrL567-A and AvrL567-D. The two proteins share 92% amino acid sequence identity (they differ at 12 positions; Figure 1A
); they are both functional Avr proteins that differ in the specificity of R protein recognition (Dodds et al., 2004
Structure Determination All of the 12 AvrL567 gene variants encode predicted proteins of 150 amino acids, including a putative 23–amino acid cleavable signal peptide (Dodds et al., 2004
Overall Structure The structures of AvrL567-A and AvrL567-D are very similar to each other (Figure 1B); after superposition, the root mean square deviation of 113 structurally equivalent C atoms is 0.59 Å; therefore, the structure of AvrL567-A will be used for all analyses unless indicated otherwise. The structure is a ß-sandwich dominated by two antiparallel ß-sheets, sheet A with four strands (ß-strands ß1, ß7, ß5, and ß6) and sheet B with three strands (ß-strands ß2, ß3, and ß4; Figures 1C and 1D) that arrange into an incompletely closed ß-barrel. There is also a three-residue 310 helix in the loop connecting ß-strands 6 and 7. The N-terminal regions in both AvrL567-A and AvrL567-D (residues 24 to 35 and 24 to 36, respectively) had uninterpretable electron densities, suggesting that these regions are flexible in both structures (the presence of these residues was demonstrated by mass spectrometry analysis on crystals). This is consistent with limited proteolysis results (Dodds et al., 2006
Structure-Based Insights into Pathogenicity-Associated Functions of AvrL567 Proteins
The similarity to ToxA is intriguing because ToxA is a host-selective toxin secreted into the host apoplast by certain races of P. tritici-repentis. Recent work has shown that the apoplastic ToxA protein is internalized into mesophyll cells of sensitive but not insensitive host genotypes, where it induces cell death (Manning and Ciuffetti, 2005
The metaserver ProKnow (Pal and Eisenberg, 2005
Protein sequence comparisons (Altschul et al., 1990
To test the hypothesis that AvrL567 proteins bind DNA, we performed electrophoretic mobility shift assays using the recently described pentaprobe reagents (Kwan et al., 2003
Structural Basis of the Specificity of Resistance Response
The side chains of all but one of the 35 polymorphic positions in the AvrL567 family are highly solvent exposed in the AvrL567-A and -D structures, and substitutions in these residues would not be expected to disrupt protein folding or stability (Figure 2B). The one exception is Ile-86; however, the conservative replacement of this residue by Leu in AvrL567-C is expected to have little effect on structure or stability, which is supported by the structural characterization of AvrL567-C (Dodds et al., 2006
Identification of Specificity-Determining Residues by Mutational Analysis
Reciprocal exchanges of each of the 50, 90, and 96 polymorphisms revealed that two of these positions, 50 and 96, are particularly important for L5 recognition. Substituting either of these residues in AvrL567-D with the corresponding residue from AvrL567-A (T50I or L96R) was sufficient to allow the interaction of this protein with L5 in yeast (Figure 3B). This interaction was detected most strongly when the GAL4-AD was fused to L5 and the GAL4-BD fused to AvrL567 but was weaker when the fusions were reversed. This is consistent with previous indications that the former fusion protein orientation provides a more sensitive measure of this protein interaction (Dodds et al., 2006
Interestingly, most of these changes in AvrL567-A and -D had no effect on L6 recognition, which suggests that the L5 and L6 interactions with these proteins may involve different amino acid contact points. However, the I50T mutation in AvrL567-A substantially decreased the L6 interaction in yeast and also reduced the HR induction in planta. This observation was unexpected because the Thr-50 polymorphism was derived from the AvrL567-D protein, which is recognized by L6; however, the amino acids at the polymorphic positions 50, 56, 90, and 96 in the AvrL567-A I50T mutant closely resemble the corresponding amino acids in AvrL567-C, which similarly does not interact with L5 or L6. Interestingly, the reciprocal substitution (T50I) in AvrL5676-D showed an increased necrotic response when expressed in flax leaves containing L7. This is significant because L7 functions as a weak allele of L6 (i.e., it recognizes all the same AvrL567 variants as L6 but gives a weaker HR response; Dodds et al., 2006 Although the Arg-Leu polymorphism at position 96 had no apparent effect on L6 recognition, this amino acid position is important for L6 recognition because a Ser substitution at this position in AvrL567-D abolished interaction with L6 in yeast as well as HR induction in flax (Figures 3B and 3C). This polymorphism is present in another AvrL567 variant (J) that is recognized by L6 (Figure 1A), again highlighting that the effect of individual amino acid substitutions on recognition depends on the context of the other polymorphisms present in a particular AvrL567 protein. We also examined the role of the polymorphism at position 56 that distinguishes the virulence alleles (C, G, H, I, and K). The K56D substitution in AvrL567-A had no effect on recognition by L6 but did have a small effect on L5 interaction in yeast and led to a slightly reduced HR response in L5 plants (Figure 3). The corresponding substitution, N56D, in AvrL567-D had no effect on L6 recognition in yeast or in planta. The reciprocal substitutions in AvrL567-C, D56N and D56K, did not lead to any interaction with L5 or L6 in yeast or in planta (data not shown). Thus, while this polymorphism may have some effect on L5 interaction, it is not the primary cause of the nonrecognition of the AvrL567-C protein or the products of the other virulence alleles of AvrL567. It is likely that other amino acid polymorphisms in these proteins prevent their recognition, with the Thr-50 polymorphsim in AvrL567-C, -G, -I, and -K likely to have a strong effect. AvrL567-C also contains the Ser-96 polymorphism that abolished L6 recognition of AvrL567-D. The presence of both of these polymorphisms in AvrL567-E may also explain its very weak recognition by L6. In summary, the mutagenesis data suggest that of the four positions tested, the most important residues for determining the specificity are residues 50 and 96. Ile at position 50 is favorable for the interaction with L5, while Thr at this position destabilizes the interaction with L5 and L6. At position 96, Arg favors interaction with L5, while Leu favors interaction with L6. Positions 56 and 90 are shown to play a less significant role, with Asp-56 unexpectedly shown to have only a weak destabilizing effect on L5 and L6 recognition, and Ser-90 and Ile-90 showing only slight preference for L5 and L6, respectively. Overall, these results suggest that the interaction between AvrL567 proteins and their corresponding R proteins involves multiple contact points that have additive effects on the strength of the interaction. The cumulative effect of either stabilizing or destabilizing interactions at each position would determine the overall strength of the interaction. This model can explain how the impact of specific amino acid residues (such as Thr-50 and Ser-96) can depend on the context of the protein, and substitutions at different positions (e.g., Ile-50 or Arg-96 in AvrL567-D) can lead to a similar effect (recognition by the same R protein).
A Structural Model for the AvrL567-A/L6 Interaction
Conclusions Our studies provide structural information on Avr proteins that bind directly to the corresponding NBS-LRR resistance proteins (the largest class of R proteins), allowing an examination of the structural basis of this protein recognition event. The structural and mutagenesis results show that binding between the R and Avr proteins involves multiple contact points that occur across a large surface area of the Avr protein. This analysis supports a structural model in which recognition is mediated through the LRR domain of the R protein, with docking predicting binding of the AvrL567 protein within the predicted curved ß-sheet of the LRR domain. Superimposed on this overall structural compatibility between the LRR domain and AvrL567 proteins is the formation of specific amino acid contact points that contribute to stabilizing the protein interaction. The data show that individual amino acid contacts have additive effects in either stabilizing or destabilizing the protein interaction and that it is the summation of these effects that determines the binding affinity of the interaction. There is also a strong correlation between the strength of the R–Avr binding interaction and the strength of the HR response induced in flax (Figure 3) (Dodds et al., 2006
These results have interesting implications for the coevolution of R and Avr proteins. We previously observed a high level of diversifying selection acting on both the L and AvrL567 genes and suggested that this was due to a coevolutionary arms race (Dodds et al., 2001b The determination of the three-dimensional structures of AvrL567 proteins has also provided some clues about the possible pathogenicity-associated functions of the flax rust avirulence proteins that can now be tested experimentally. For example, a detailed study of the nucleic acid binding activity, including identification of specific binding targets, will be required to establish whether this reflects a physiologically important function during infection. In conclusion, the results represent a significant step toward defining the resistance response at a molecular level and moving toward engineering new plant disease resistance genes to control diseases for which naturally occurring resistance is not adequate.
Expression and Purification Predicted mature forms of AvrL567-A, AvrL567-C, and AvrL567-D proteins (residues 24 to 150; the signal peptide was not included) were expressed in Escherichia coli as fusion proteins with N-terminal hexahistidine and ubiquitin tags (Catanzariti et al., 2004 1.0. Isopropylthio-ß-galactoside was added to induce protein expression at 15°C for a further 18 to 20 h (final OD600 of 2.5 3.0). The cells were harvested by centrifugation at 6700g for 10 min at 4°C and resuspended in one-tenth of the culture volume in buffer A (20 mM HEPES, pH 7, 300 mM NaCl, 10 mM imidazole, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 1 mg/mL of aprotinin, 1 mg/mL of leupeptin, and 1 mg/mL of pepstatin). Cell suspensions were lysed by three freeze-thaw cycles using liquid nitrogen and in the presence of lysozyme (0.5 mg/mL) and DNase (50 units per 50 mL of lysate; Roche). Cell debris was removed by centrifugation at 15,000g for 30 min. The soluble fractions were collected and incubated with Talon resin (2 mL of prewashed resin per liter of culture; BD Biosciences) for immobilized metal affinity chromatography. After one hour of incubation on the rotating wheel at 4°C, the resin was washed with buffer A and buffer B (buffer A with 20 mM imidazole) and finally resuspended in 13 mL of buffer A containing deubiquitinating (DUB) enzyme (1:50 enzyme-to-substrate ratio) and 5 mM ß-mercaptoethanol for 18 20 h at 4°C. The cleaved AvrL567 protein was then eluted in the supernatant and further purified by size-exclusion chromatography using a Hi-Load Superdex 200 26/60 gel filtration column (GE Healthcare). Purified proteins were concentrated to 30 mg/mL using Amicon Ultra centrifugal filter devices with low binding Ultracel membrane (Millipore), frozen as aliquots in liquid nitrogen, and stored at –80°C. The protein concentrations were determined by measuring absorption at 280 nm, based on calculated extinction coefficient (AvrL567-A, 21,030 M–1 cm–1; AvrL567-C, 22,430 M–1 cm–1; AvrL567-D, 21,030 M–1 cm–1). The final yield was 10 mg of protein per liter of culture for all three proteins. The proteins were > 95% pure as determined by SDS-PAGE.
DUB was expressed as described for AvrL567 proteins, except that the overnight culture was expressed at 37°C (Catanzariti et al., 2004
Protein Characterization For N-terminal sequencing, proteins were transferred onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (GE Healthcare) and stained with Ponceau S. The band at the correct molecular weight was excised and analyzed with a PE Applied Biosystems Procise 492 cLC protein sequencer. Both MALDI-TOF and N-terminal sequencing confirmed the identity and accurate molecular weight of the protein.
Crystallization and Crystal Structure Determination
The AvrL567-A crystals were transferred into a cryoprotectant solution containing the crystallization mother liquor containing additional 30% (v/v) 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol and flash-cooled in liquid nitrogen. The x-ray diffraction data sets were collected in a cryostream (100 K) with a RaxisIV++ image plate detector and with CuK
The AvrL567-D crystals were cryoprotected as for AvrL567-A. The crystals have the symmetry of the orthorhombic space group P212121 with unit cell lengths a = 39.5 Å, b = 45.8 Å, and c = 84.2 Å and one molecule per asymmetric unit. The structure was solved by molecular replacement with the program Phaser (Storoni et al., 2004
Molecular Modeling
Proteolytic Assays
Metal Binding Studies
Nucleic Acid Binding Assays
Site-Directed Mutagenesis and Yeast Two-Hybrid Analysis
Transient Expression Assays
Accession Numbers
Supplemental Data
We thank Chris Wood for help with N-terminal sequencing and Daigo Takemoto and David Jones for sharing unpublished data. This work was funded in part by a grant from the Australian Research Council (to B.K., P.A.A., and J.G.E.). B.K. is an Australian Research Council Federation Fellow and a National Health and Medical Research Council Honorary Research Fellow, J.K.F. was a National Health and Medical Research Council CJ Martin Fellow, and H.J.S. is a Queensland Smart State Fellow.
1 These authors contributed equally to this work.
2 On leave from the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Josef Stefan Institute, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
3 Current address: Department of Biomedical Sciences, Charles Sturt University, Wagga Wagga, Australia.
4 Current address: Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720.
The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantcell.org) is: Bo
[W] Online version contains Web-only data. www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.107.053611 Received June 13, 2007; Revision received August 14, 2007. accepted August 24, 2007.
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