1. The perception and evolution of flagellin, cold shock protein and elongation factor Tu from vector-borne bacterial plant pathogens.
- Author
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Trinh, Jessica, Tran, Megann, and Coaker, Gitta
- Subjects
microbe‐associated molecular patterns ,pattern recognition receptor ,plant immunity ,vector‐borne pathogens ,Flagellin ,Cold Shock Proteins and Peptides ,Peptide Elongation Factor Tu ,Plant Diseases ,Bacterial Proteins ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Phylogeny ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Bacteria - Abstract
Vector-borne bacterial pathogens cause devastating plant diseases that cost billions of dollars in crop losses worldwide. These pathogens have evolved to be host- and vector-dependent, resulting in a reduced genome size compared to their free-living relatives. All known vector-borne bacterial plant pathogens belong to four different genera: Candidatus Liberibacter, Candidatus Phytoplasma, Spiroplasma and Xylella. To protect themselves against pathogens, plants have evolved pattern recognition receptors that can detect conserved pathogen features as non-self and mount an immune response. To gain an understanding of how vector-borne pathogen features are perceived in plants, we investigated three proteinaceous features derived from cold shock protein (csp22), flagellin (flg22) and elongation factor Tu (elf18) from vector-borne bacterial pathogens as well as their closest free-living relatives. In general, vector-borne pathogens have fewer copies of genes encoding flagellin and cold shock protein compared to their closest free-living relatives. Furthermore, epitopes from vector-borne pathogens were less likely to be immunogenic compared to their free-living counterparts. Most Liberibacter csp22 and elf18 epitopes do not trigger plant immune responses in tomato or Arabidopsis. Interestingly, csp22 from the citrus pathogen Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus triggers immune responses in solanaceous plants, while csp22 from the solanaceous pathogen Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum does not. Our findings suggest that vector-borne plant pathogenic bacteria evolved to evade host recognition.
- Published
- 2024