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A novel role for the TIR domain in association with pathogen-derived elicitors
Authors:Burch-Smith Tessa M  Schiff Michael  Caplan Jeffrey L  Tsao Jeffrey  Czymmek Kirk  Dinesh-Kumar Savithramma P
Affiliation:1, Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America;2, Department of Biological Sciences, Delaware Biotechnology Institute, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware, United States of America;University of North Carolina, United States of America
Abstract:Plant innate immunity is mediated by Resistance (R) proteins, which bear a striking resemblance to animal molecules of similar function. Tobacco N is a TIR-NB-LRR R gene that confers resistance to Tobacco mosaic virus, specifically the p50 helicase domain. An intriguing question is how plant R proteins recognize the presence of pathogen-derived Avirulence (Avr) elicitor proteins. We have used biochemical cell fraction and immunoprecipitation in addition to confocal fluorescence microscopy of living tissue to examine the association between N and p50. Surprisingly, both N and p50 are cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins, and N's nuclear localization is required for its function. We also demonstrate an in planta association between N and p50. Further, we show that N's TIR domain is critical for this association, and indeed, it alone can associate with p50. Our results differ from current models for plant innate immunity that propose detection is mediated solely through the LRR domains of these molecules. The data we present support an intricate process of pathogen elicitor recognition by R proteins involving multiple subcellular compartments and the formation of multiple protein complexes.
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