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Acta Cryst. (2014). A70, C801
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An estimated 15% of global crop production is lost to pre-harvest disease every year. New ways to manage plant diseases are required. A mechanistic understanding of how plant pathogens re-program their hosts to enable colonisation may provide novel genetic or chemical opportunities to interfere with disease. One notorious plant parasite is the Irish potato famine pathogen Phytophthora infestans. This pathogen remains a considerable threat to potato/tomato crops today as the agent of late blight. Plant pathogens secrete effector proteins outside of and into plant cells to suppress host defences and manipulate cell physiology. Structural studies have provided insights into effector evolution and enabled experiments to probe function [1-3]. Crystal structures of 4 Phytophthora RXLR-type effectors, which are unrelated in primary sequence, revealed similarities in the fold of these proteins. This fold was proposed to act as a stable scaffold that supports diversification of effectors. Further, molecular modelling has enabled mapping of single-site variants responsible for specialisation of a Phytophthora Cystatin-like effector, revealing how effectors can adapt to new hosts after a "host jump". Structural studies describing how RXLR-effectors interact with host targets are lacking. We have used Y2H/co-IP studies to identify host proteins that interact with P. infestans effectors PexRD2 and PexRD54. PexRD2 interacts with MAPKKKe, a component of plant immune signalling pathways, and suppressed cell death activities of this protein. We used the structure of PexRD2 to design mutants that fail to interact with MAPKKKe, and no longer suppress cell-death activities. We found that PexRD54 interacts with potato homologues of the autophagy protein ATG8. We have obtained a crystal structure for PexRD54 in the presence of ATG8. We are now using X-ray scattering to verify the complex structure in solution prior to establishing the role of this interaction during infection.

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Acta Cryst. (2014). A70, C826
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Autophagy is a catabolic process involving degradation of dysfunctional cytoplasmic components to ensure cellular survival under starvation conditions. The process involves formation of double-membrane vesicles called autophagosomes and delivery of the inner constituents to lytic compartments. It can also target invading pathogens, such as intracellular bacteria, for destruction and is thus implicated in innate immune pathways [1]. In response, certain mammalian pathogens deliver effector proteins into host cells that inhibit autophagy and contribute to enabling parasitic infection [2]. Pyhtophthora infestans, the Irish potato famine pathogen, is a causative agent of late blight disease in potato and tomato crops. It delivers a plethora of modular effector proteins into plant cells to promote infection. Once inside the cell, RXLR-type effector proteins engage with host cell proteins, to manipulate host cell physiology for the benefit of the pathogen. As plants lack an adaptive immune system, this provides a robust mechanism for pathogens to circumvent host defense. PexRD54 is an intracellular RXLR-type effector protein produced by P. infestans. PexRD54 interacts with potato homologues of autophagy protein ATG8 in plant cells. We have been investigating the structural and biochemical basis of the PexRD54/ATG8 interaction in vitro. We have purified PexRD54 and ATG8 independently and in complex from E. coli. Using protein/protein interaction studies we have shown that PexRD54 binds ATG8 with sub-micromolar affinity. We have also determined the structure of PexRD54 in the presence of ATG8. This crystal structure provides key insights into how the previously reported WY-fold of oomycete RXLR-type effectors [3] can be organized in multiple repeats. The structural data also provides insights into the interaction between PexRD54 and ATG8, suggesting further experiments to understand the impact of this interaction on host cell physiology and how this benefits the pathogen.
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