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First published online July 3, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.117663 Plant Physiology 148:348-357 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
A Novel Role for Protein Farnesylation in Plant Innate Immunity1,[C],[W],[OA]Michael Smith Laboratories (S.G., T.W., Y.Z., X.L.) and Department of Botany (S.G., T.W., X.L.), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4; National Institute of Biological Sciences, Beijing 102206, People's Republic of China (Y.Z.); National Research Council, Plant Biotechnology Institute, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada S7N 0W9 (P.F.); and Department of Botany, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3B2 (P.M.)
Plants utilize tightly regulated mechanisms to defend themselves against pathogens. Initial recognition results in activation of specific Resistance (R) proteins that trigger downstream immune responses, in which the signaling networks remain largely unknown. A point mutation in SUPPRESSOR OF NPR1 CONSTITUTIVE1 (SNC1), a RESISTANCE TO PERONOSPORA PARASITICA4 R gene homolog, renders plants constitutively resistant to virulent pathogens. Genetic suppressors of snc1 may carry mutations in genes encoding novel signaling components downstream of activated R proteins. One such suppressor was identified as a novel loss-of-function allele of ENHANCED RESPONSE TO ABSCISIC ACID1 (ERA1), which encodes the β-subunit of protein farnesyltransferase. Protein farnesylation involves attachment of C15-prenyl residues to the carboxyl termini of specific target proteins. Mutant era1 plants display enhanced susceptibility to virulent bacterial and oomycete pathogens, implying a role for farnesylation in basal defense. In addition to its role in snc1-mediated resistance, era1 affects several other R-protein-mediated resistance responses against bacteria and oomycetes. ERA1 acts partly independent of abscisic acid and additively with the resistance regulator NON-EXPRESSOR OF PR GENES1 in the signaling network. Defects in geranylgeranyl transferase I, a protein modification similar to farnesylation, do not affect resistance responses, indicating that farnesylation is most likely specifically required in plant defense signaling. Taken together, we present a novel role for farnesyltransferase in plant-pathogen interactions, suggesting the importance of protein farnesylation, which contributes to the specificity and efficacy of signal transduction events.
Plant immunity to microbial pathogens requires an intricate signaling network, components of which are subjects of current investigation. An integral part of pathogen-specific defense is mediated by Resistance (R) proteins, which recognize pathogenic effector molecules or results of their pathogenic activity (Jones and Dangl, 2006
Proper localization of defense signaling components and interaction with other proteins are imperative for successful defense responses, and these often depend on posttranslational modifications. For example, membrane association has been demonstrated for the negative regulatory and avirulence target protein RPM1 INTERACTING PROTEIN4 (RIN4), which is tethered to the plasma membrane most likely via palmytoylation at its C terminus (Kim et al., 2005
Although many R genes have been cloned, the signaling events downstream of R-protein activation remain elusive. To search for additional components required for R-protein signaling, we took advantage of the plant autoimmune model suppressor of npr1 constitutive1 (snc1), a unique gain-of-function allele of a TIR-NBS-LRR R gene homologous to RESISTANCE TO PERONOSPORA PARASITICA4 (RPP4) and RPP5. Apart from constitutive resistance against virulent bacterial and oomycete pathogens, the snc1 mutant also displays increased levels of endogenous salicylic acid (SA) and constitutive expression of PR genes (Li et al., 2001
Here, we present mos8, an independent suppressor of snc1-mediated defense responses. mos8 is a novel allele of ENHANCED RESPONSE TO ABA1 (ERA1), which encodes the protein farnesyltransferase β-subunit and has been shown to be important in development and hormonal responses (Cutler et al., 1996
mos8 Suppresses Constitutive Resistance in snc1 npr1-1
The suppressor screen of snc1 npr1-1 was described previously (Zhang and Li, 2005
mos8 Contains a Mutation in a Farnesyltransferase Subunit
The mutation in mos8 was identified using a map-based approach. mos8 snc1 npr1-1 was crossed with snc1 in the Landsberg erecta (Ler) background (Ler-snc1; Zhang and Li, 2005
We crossed mos8 snc1 npr1-1 with several available alleles of era1 including Salk_110517, a T-DNA insertion allele in an exon of At5g40280 from the Arabidopsis Biological Resource Center (ABRC; Alonso et al., 2003
The phenotype of era1-7 is comparable to the deletion allele era1-2, suggesting that era1-7 is a complete loss-of-function allele. Based on the annotation of the published ERA1 open reading frame (Ziegelhoffer et al., 2000
Since mos8 snc1 npr1-1 was shown to be more susceptible than Col to virulent bacteria, we suspected that era1 might also play a role in basal resistance. We generated the mos8/era1-7 single mutant by backcrossing with wild type and tested it together with the other available alleles in Col background in infection assays. The era1-7 single mutant showed about 20-fold more growth of virulent P.s.m. ES4326 compared with Col, similar to era1-2 and era1-8 (Fig. 4A
). Furthermore, the era1 alleles in Col background were more susceptible to the virulent oomycete H.p. Noco2 (Fig. 4B). These data suggest that ERA1 plays an essential role in basal defense signaling in responses to different virulent pathogen species. To test whether mos8/era1 is defective in pathogen-associated molecular pattern responses, we also examined the growth of the mutant era1 plants in the presence of flg22, a well-studied peptide derived from the Escherichia coli flagellum (Gomez-Gomez and Boller, 2002
era1 Affects Resistance to Avirulent Pathogens
Several of the mos mutants identified in the snc1 suppressor screen have been shown to also exhibit reduced resistance toward avirulent pathogens (Palma et al., 2005
We also took advantage of the availability of era1 alleles in different genetic backgrounds to investigate their responses to avirulent oomycetes. H.p. Noco2 is a virulent pathogen on the Col ecotype but avirulent on Ler, which contains the RPP5 R gene. Infection assays with H.p. Noco2 on era1 alleles in different ecotypes can thus provide insight into the involvement of ERA1 in both compatible and incompatible interactions. era1 mutants in the Col genetic background showed significantly more growth of the oomycete pathogen (Fig. 4B). Inoculation of Ler plants induced a rapid HR, which is apparent in trypan blue staining (Fig. 5E), where the staining reveals hyphal structures and dead cells, whereas live cells are not stained. The era1-4 and era1-6 alleles in the Ler background suppress RPP5-mediated resistance toward H.p. Noco2, visualized by hyphal growth in infected tissues and the formation of conidiophores (Fig. 5, C and E). When infected with H.p. Emwa1, which is recognized by RPP4 in Col, era1 mutant plants showed susceptibility (Fig. 5, D and E). Strong resistance toward H.p. Emwa1 in Ler conferred by RPP5 and RPP8 was also compromised in era1-6, as demonstrated by extensive trailing necrosis and occasional sporulation on the mutant plants (Fig. 5E). Taken together, these findings indicate that the farnesyltransferase encoded by ERA1 and therefore farnesylation is important in a subset of R-protein-mediated resistance responses to bacterial and oomycete pathogens.
Resistance signaling downstream of snc1 has been shown to combine the contributions of at least three distinct signaling pathways, dependent and independent on either SA or NPR1, or both (Zhang et al., 2003
ABA Is Only Partially Responsible for Enhanced Susceptibility of era1 Mutant Plants
Another possible role of ERA1 in defense signaling could come from its involvement in ABA signaling. era1 mutants are known to be hypersensitive to ABA, showing enhanced responses to ABA during germination as well as in the guard cell response (Pei et al., 1998
We first asked whether endogenous ABA levels are altered in snc1 similar to the SA levels, thus potentially contributing to its enhanced resistance phenotype. When ABA levels were measured in Col and snc1, we consistently observed slightly lower levels of ABA in snc1, and substantially lower levels of the major product of ABA catabolism, phaseic acid (Supplemental Fig. S3), suggesting that ABA could contribute negatively to the snc1-mediated resistance signaling. This is consistent with previous reports describing a negative correlation between ABA and susceptibility to biotrophic and necrotrophic pathogens (Audenaert et al., 2002 Second, to dissect further the contribution of ABA, we tested whether the era1 mutant phenotypes are mainly attributable to the defect in ABA signaling. To uncouple the ABA responses from the enhanced susceptibility in era1, we generated double mutants between era1-7 and the ABA biosynthesis mutants aba2-1 and aba1-5, since using ABA biosynthesis mutants would give a more straight forward interpretation than using the ABA signaling mutants. The era1-7 aba2-1 double mutants display characteristics of both single-mutant phenotypes, i.e. late flowering but dark and slender leaves, suggesting additive roles for era1 and ABA. Figure 7A shows the effect of the aba1-5 and aba2-1 mutations on susceptibility toward P. syringae. aba mutants display wild-type-like susceptibility to virulent P.s.m. and the presence of aba in the era1 background is not sufficient to reduce the increased susceptibility observed in era1 to wild-type levels. Similar trends were observed when the double-mutant plants were infected with H.p. Noco2 (Fig. 7B), P.s.t. DC3000 carrying AvrRpm1 or AvrRpm4, and H.p. Cala2 carrying AvrRPP2 (Supplemental Fig. S4). These data indicate that the role of ERA1 in defense signaling can only partially be explained by its involvement in ABA signal transduction. We therefore conclude that there are at least two parallel pathways involving ERA1 in innate immunity, one, which functions in ABA signaling and another, which functions independently of ABA.
Geranylgeranyltransferase 1 Is Not Required in Defense Responses
Protein farnesyltransferase is a modular enzyme in which the We challenged the ggb-2 mutant plants with virulent P.s.m. ES4326 and avirulent P. syringae. In contrast to the era1 alleles, the mutant did not exhibit enhanced susceptibility (Fig. 8A ; data not shown). The ggb-2 mutant showed a slight but not statistically significant increased susceptibility to H.p. Noco2 compared to wild type (P = 0.3307, t test), and did not exhibit the extensive oomycete growth observed in era1 (Fig. 8B). Furthermore, RPP4-mediated resistance toward H.p. Emwa1 was only mildly affected in ggb-2 as visualized by the development of trailing necrosis and delayed HR in the mutant (Fig. 8C). These data imply a minor involvement of geranylgeranylation in some aspects of defense responses.
To test whether the ggb-2 mutation had an effect on snc1-mediated resistance, we generated the snc1 ggb-2 double mutant. We did not observe any suppression of snc1-associated morphological and disease phenotypes (data not shown). Taken together, our findings suggest that specifically farnesyltransferase, and not geranylgeranyltransferase 1, plays an important role in both basal and R protein defense signaling.
Proteins are frequently altered posttranslationally to modify their solubility, compartmentalization, or interaction with other proteins. The most common lipid modification, prenylation, involves the covalent attachment of farnesyl- or geranylgeranyl-diphosphate moieties to the C termini of a small group of target proteins, which contain a conserved CaaX motif (Galichet and Gruissem, 2003
Protein prenyltransferases are modular enzymes and mutations in several subunits have been described in Arabidopsis (Galichet and Gruissem, 2003 Here we show that protein farnesylation is not only important in development and abiotic stress responses, but also in biotic interactions. The enhanced susceptibility of era1 toward virulent bacterial and oomycete pathogens indicates the involvement of farnesylation in basal defense responses. In addition, signaling mediated by several R proteins relies on functional ERA1, further demonstrating the existence of divergent signaling events downstream of different R-protein classes.
Interestingly, a mutant in the alternative prenyltransferase β-subunit, ggb-2, displayed no defense-related phenotype and was unable to suppress constitutive resistance mediated by snc1 (Fig. 8). Geranylgeranyltransferase β (GGB) was previously shown to partially compensate a lack of farnesyltransferase activity and overexpression of GGB complemented the era1 phenotype (Running et al., 2004
The differential requirement for farnesylation and geranylgeranylation in defense responses suggests that one or more targets of farnesyltransferase are involved in defense signaling. Farnesyl- and geranylgeranyltransferase target proteins differ with respect to their C-terminal CaaX consensus sequence, where C represents the prenylation target Cys and "a" indicates an aliphatic amino acid. While the "X" in farnesylated proteins could be Met, Ala, Gln, Ser, or Cys, the geranylgeranylated proteins usually have a Leu in this position (Rodriguez-Concepcion et al., 1999
It is tempting to speculate about a requirement for specific farnesylated proteins in defense responses, and some prenylated proteins have been associated with plant-pathogen interactions. AVRRPT2 INDUCED GENE1 (AIG1) was identified as rapidly transcriptionally up-regulated in response to infection with P.s.m. ES4326 AvrRpt2 (Reuber and Ausubel, 1996 We investigated a number of potential farnesylated signaling components by a reverse genetics approach using available T-DNA insertion lines from the Arabidopsis stock center, but did not find any mutants showing an altered response to either virulent P.s.m. ES4326 or avirulent H.p. Emwa1 (Supplemental Table S3). However, one has to be cautious with the interpretation of these results, given that not all potential targets were tested due to unavailability of T-DNA insertions in a number of interesting genes (such as AIG1) or potential redundancies among protein family members. Also, among the mutants we tested, some may not be null knockout mutants, such as the ones with T-DNA insertions at 3'-untranslated region. Future in-depth investigation of all potential ERA1 targets may reveal which proteins are the ones regulated by ERA1 that signal in defense, and how their signaling activities are regulated by farnesylation.
It is widely accepted that ABA plays important and complex roles in both biotic and abiotic stress responses and has been the subject of recent reviews (Mauch-Mani and Mauch, 2005 Taken together, data presented in this study stress the importance of posttranslational lipid modifications during disease resistance signaling, and future work to search for farnesylation targets in innate immunity will reveal further details of the mystery.
Plant Growth and Mutant Characterization
Plants were grown at 22°C under long-day conditions (16 h light/8 h dark). Seeds were surface sterilized using 5% hypochlorite solution and stratified for 7 d at 4°C before sowing. The screen for suppressors of the snc1 npr1-1 double mutant was described previously (Zhang and Li, 2005
For Pseudomonas infections, 5-week-old soil-grown plants were infiltrated with a bacterial suspension in 10 mM MgCl2 at an optical density of OD600 = 0.0001 for virulent P.s.m. ES4326 or OD600 = 0.001 for avirulent P.s.m. and P.s.t. using a blunt syringe. Bacterial growth was measured 3 d postinfection (dpi) by harvesting leaf discs and determining colony forming units (cfu). H.p. isolates Noco2 and Emwa1 were inoculated on 2-week-old seedlings at a concentration of 5 x 105 conidia/mL. At 7 dpi, conidia were quantified by harvesting replicate samples of 15 plants, vortexing, and counting using a hemocytometer. Plant necrosis and hyphal growth were visualized using lactophenol trypan blue staining following a protocol by Koch and Slusarenko (1990)
The markers used to map mos8 were derived from the Ler/Col polymorphism database provided by Monsanto on the The Arabidopsis Information Resource homepage (Jander et al., 2002
ERA1 cDNA as predicted was amplified using Platinum Pfx DNA polymerase (Invitrogen) with primers ERA1short_5'_EcoRI: 5'-agaattcatggaagagctttcaagcc-3' and ERA1short_3'_NotI: 5'-ttttgcggccgctcatgctgctttaaagaagaac-3', containing novel restriction sites (underlined). The PCR fragment was subcloned into pBluescript (Alting-Mees et al., 1992
To generate the era1-7 single and the era1-7 snc1 and era1-7 npr1-1 double mutants, mos8 snc1 npr1-1 was crossed with Col carrying the pBGL2::GUS reporter transgene. Mutant combinations were identified among the F2 progeny from selfed F1 plants based on morphological phenotypes and genotyping with PCR. Homozygosity of snc1 in the era1-7 snc1 double mutant was confirmed by backcrossing with snc1, all F1 progeny displayed snc1 morphology. To generate the era1-7 aba2-1 and era1-7 aba1-5 double mutants, era1-7 plants were crossed with aba2-1 and aba1-5 homozygous plants obtained from Dr. J.-G. Chen and ABRC. F1 progeny displayed wild-type phenotype and were selfed. Among the F2 progeny, plants displaying a combination of typical mos8 and aba mutant morphology (late flowering, slender leaves) were identified as potential double mutants. Backcrossing with the respective parents was carried out to confirm the identity of the doubles.
The era1-8 allele was identified in Salk_110517 using the gene-specific primers Salk_110517-A (5'-agaacacaaggggctgcctg-3') and Salk_110517-B (5'-tgcttccctcttccttgatg-3'). Homozygous ggb-2 mutant plants were identified in Salk_040904 using gene-specific primers Salk_040904-A (5'-tagtaggaaaggcctggaag-3') and Salk_040904-B (5'-gatccaagtgtccttgaacg-3'). Presence of either T-DNA was verified using a combination of Lba1 and Salk_110517-A or Salk_040904-A.
The method for ABA and metabolite extraction and quantitative analysis by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry was as described (Feurtado et al., 2004 Sequence data from this article can be found in the GenBank/EMBL data libraries under accession number ABR08910.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Yu Ti Cheng and Mark Tessaro for excellent technical assistance; Elliot Meyerowitz for seeds of era1 alleles; Jin-Gui Chen for the aba1-5 and aba2-1 seeds; Sue Abrams, Irina Zaharia, and the Plant Biotechnology Institute hormone profiling team for ABA analysis; Wilhelm Gruissem for sharing the list of predicted farnesylated proteins in Arabidopsis; and Bjoern Hamberger and Marcel Wiermer for critical reading of the manuscript. Received February 14, 2008; accepted June 20, 2008; published July 3, 2008.
1 This work was supported by a doctoral fellowship from the Austrian Academy of Sciences and a University of British Columbia Graduate Fellowship to S.G., and by financial support from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Canadian Foundation for Innovation, the British Columbia Knowledge Development Fund, the University of British Columbia Blusson Fund, and the University of British Columbia Michael Smith Laboratories to X.L.
2 Present address: Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, 111 Koshland Hall, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720–3102. 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.plantphysiol.org) is: Xin Li (xinli{at}interchange.ubc.ca).
[C] Some figures in this article are displayed in color online but in black and white in the print edition.
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.117663 * Corresponding author; e-mail xinli{at}interchange.ubc.ca.
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