Abstract
During symbiosis, organisms use a range of metabolic and protein-based signals to communicate. Of these protein signals, one class is defined as ‘effectors’, i.e., small secreted proteins (SSPs) that cause phenotypical and physiological changes in another organism. To date, protein-based effectors have been described in aphids, nematodes, fungi and bacteria. Using RNA sequencing of Populus trichocarpa roots in mutualistic symbiosis with the ectomycorrhizal fungus Laccaria bicolor, we sought to determine if host plants also contain genes encoding effector-like proteins. We identified 417 plant-encoded putative SSPs that were significantly regulated during this interaction, including 161 SSPs specific to P. trichocarpa and 15 SSPs exhibiting expansion in Populus and closely related lineages. We demonstrate that a subset of these SSPs can enter L. bicolor hyphae, localize to the nucleus and affect hyphal growth and morphology. We conclude that plants encode proteins that appear to function as effector proteins that may regulate symbiotic associations.
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Introduction
Symbiosis, defined as a durable interaction between two or more organisms, is a complex association that requires both physiological and morphological signaling, reception and alterations on the part of both organisms. Many fungal lineages within the pathogenic/mutualistic continuum have evolved elaborate protein-based signals to influence their hosts in order to support their metabolic requirements during symbiosis1. These proteins, called effectors, are typically fungal strain- or species-specific, usually ≤250 amino acids in size, and carry a secretion signal motif that may be cysteine-rich. Some examples of pathogenic effector proteins include: Avr3a of Phytophthora infestans 2, 3, the ChCEs of Colletotrichum higginsianum 4, RTP1 of Uromyces fabae 5 and the TIN2 of Ustilago maydis 6. More recently, effector proteins have also been characterized in mutualistic fungi. For example, MiSSP7 of the ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungus Laccaria bicolor stabilizes the Populus jasmonic acid signaling repressor PtJAZ67 while the SP7 protein of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Rhizophagus irregularis (formerly Glomus intraradices) blocks the activity of ERF198.
When viewed from the perspective of the fungal-encoded effector biology described to date, the outcome of symbiosis would appear to be heavily influenced by the colonizing fungus. Is this true, or could plants encode similar “effector-like” proteins that, in turn, exert a level of influence on the activity of the symbiotic associates? Previous research supporting the influence of plants over microbial biology suggests that: (1) plants utilize a number of secondary metabolites to affect rhizospheric and endopsheric microbes9, (2) general root exudates act as microbial chemoattractants10, (3) plants produce strigolactones which act as signals in initiating mycorrhizal formation11 and (4) flavonoids from plants function as antimicrobial compounds12, 13.
Recently, attention has turned to investigating proteins present in root exudates and their role in influencing plant-microbe interactions. Proteins, such as peptidases, hydrolases and defensins, have been implicated in affecting symbiosis14,15,16. There is also a precedent for plant small secreted proteins (SSPs; ≤250 amino acids) that are produced by roots and enter the cytosol of nitrogen-fixing bacteria during nodule formation to govern the outcome of these mutualistic interactions17,18,19,20. In total, 146 plant cysteine-rich SSPs have been identified17, 19, 21. It is generally understood that the discovery of SSPs in newly sequenced plant genomes has been hampered by the lack of gene annotation for proteins smaller than 100 amino acids (aa) due to a high false positive discovery rate from computational prediction of small open reading frames (ORFs) and a lack of homology across plant genomes which constrains ab initio gene calling22, 23.
The lack of SSP annotation is changing, however, due to the increasing availability of deep RNA-sequencing data. Recent re-annotation of the Arabidopsis and Populus genomes found evidence for 2,099 and 1,282 new small proteins, respectively22, 24. Moreover, mutation analysis of a number of these new Arabidopsis small proteins has demonstrated that a large portion play critical roles in plant developmental processes such as flowering, leaf development and overall plant structure24. However, the possibility that a number of these proteins could be secreted and function as effector proteins during symbiotic interactions is still uncertain. The aim of this study was to determine if: (1) Populus encoded effector-like proteins are regulated during mutualistic symbiosis with the ectomycorrhizal fungus L. bicolor and (2) whether some of these proteins might be able to enter the hyphae of L. bicolor and affect the growth of the fungus.
Results
Size bias in proteins predicted to be secreted during a mutualistic interaction
Using a computational pipeline for discovery of small protein-encoding genes based on transcriptomes analyzed by RNA-seq (Fig. 1a), we identified 2,819 Populus protein-encoding genes (designated as the ‘All-protein set’) that exhibited differential (p-value < 0.05) transcript abundance across all stages of mycorrhizal root tip development during symbiosis between P. trichocarpa and L. bicolor. The quantitative expression based on RNA-seq data was validated by quantitative RT-PCR analysis of 13 randomly-selected transcripts, which significantly correlated with the data obtained from the RNA-seq transcript analysis (p-value < 0.001; Supplementary Fig. S1; Supplementary Table S1). In the “All-protein set”, 2,631 transcripts (93.3%) contained a complete open reading frame (ORF) and were designated as the full-length (FL) set. In the FL set, 1,242 proteins (47.2%) satisfied the criteria for small proteins, i.e., ≤250 amino acids in length, and were designated as the “SmP set”. Given that SSPs are typically secreted, the predicted subcellular localizations of the FL set proteins were determined by three differential computational tools: LocTree225, CELLO26 and YLoc27. From this analysis, 646 proteins in the FL set were predicted to code for secreted proteins (the SeP set). Within the SeP set, there was an over-representation of small proteins of ≤250 aa in length (64.6% of the SeP set), with the largest number of proteins falling within the size range of 51–100 aa (Fig. 1b). This subgroup of proteins was designated the SSP set (Supplementary Table S2).
This SSP set (417 proteins) was further divided into sub-sets based on three computational ‘confidence level’ approaches (see Methods section): the high confidence set (“SSP_hc set”; 171 proteins), the medium confidence set (“SSP_mc set”; 126 proteins) and the low confidence set (“SSP_lc set; 120 proteins; Fig. 1a; Supplementary Table S2). Proteins not found in the current P. trichocarpa genome annotation (37% of the SSP set) were named with the prefix ‘CUFF’ while proteins found in the current Populus genome annotation v3.0 (www.Phytozome.net) were designated with the prefix ‘Potri’. In silico analysis of the SSP set found that 79 of these SSPs contained predicted nuclear localization signals as predicted by using YLoc27 and CELLO26. Functional categorization of the differentially expressed SSPs with gene ontology (GO) biological process showed that these proteins are putatively involved in different biological pathways with varying biochemical activity (Supplementary Table S2). Overall, there was enrichment for stress-related GO terms, in particular the “response to fungus” category (Supplementary Table S3).
Lineage- or genus-specific set of P. trichocarpa SSP genes
Of the entire 417 P. trichocarpa SSP set, 39% (or 161 SSPs) appear to be specific to Populus, i.e., without homologs in the other 15 species examined (Fig. 2; Supplementary Table S4), while 15 SSPs have homologs found only within closely related plant genera (Supplementary Table S5). A comparison of SSPs between P. trichocarpa accessions (Nisqually-1 and 93–960; strong ECM host plants) and P. deltoides accessions (ILL-101 and D124; poor ECM host plants)28 showed that six SSPs predicted in the P. trichocarpa genomes were missing or truncated in the P. deltoides accessions (Table 1).
Populus SSPs have functional secretion signals
To test the secretion of SSPs, a complementation assay in which the survival of the host depends on the secretion of the protein of interest was chosen. Forty full-length proteins (Supplementary Table S6), including their predicted secretion signals, were cloned upstream of a SUC2 invertase that lacked its native secretion signal. The recombinant genes were then expressed in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae suc2 mutant that cannot grow on media containing sucrose as the sole energy source without the presence of a secreted SUC2 protein. We found that on average 15 of the 40 (38%) SSPs tested complemented the suc2 mutation (Table 2; Fig. 3). Even though we used full-length genes, including the secretion signal in these tests, it is possible that the secondary structure of the small proteins masked the signal sequence and gave us a number of false negatives. Of the 40 SSPs tested, 16 were from the high confidence set (i.e., the SSP_hc set in Fig. 1a), and of those, 8 SSPs were able to able to rescue the mutant, yielding a 50% confirmation rate. In contrast, the medium confidence set of 14 SSPs (i.e., the SSP_mc set in Fig. 1a) and low confidence set of 10 SSPs (i.e., the SSP_lc set in Fig. 1a) each had a confirmation rate of around 30% (Table 2; Fig. 3). In summation, the signal peptides in some of the Populus SSPs were capable of directing secretion in a heterologous system.
Populus SSPs can enter Laccaria bicolor hyphae and accumulate in the nucleus
In order to determine if P. trichocarpa SSPs could cross the L. bicolor hyphal membrane and accumulate within the fungal cells, we used five proteins (CUFF.29946, Potri.009G063200, Potri.010G251000, Potri.019G121200 and Potri.007G006800) produced by cell-free recombinant protein synthesis without the secretion signal and with an amino-terminal covalent addition of the FITC fluorescent molecule. Five biological replicates (i.e., independent L. bicolor colonies) were then treated with an individual protein or FITC alone on the leading edge of an in vitro fungal colony. Of the five FITC-tagged proteins tested, four (CUFF.29946, Potri.009G063200, Potri.010G251000 and Potri.007G006800) were able to enter the hyphae and concentrate in the nucleus (Fig. 4a–d). The fifth, Potri.019G121200, a negative control, did not localize to the nucleus of L. bicolor hyphae (Fig. 4e), indicating that the nuclear localization is not simply due to protein size. There was absence of fluorescent signal in the nuclei of hyphae treated with FITC alone (Fig. 4f). Localization of CUFF.29946, Potri.009G063200 and Potri.010G251000 was further verified using Western blotting of L. bicolor treated with P. trichocarpa SSPs modified with an HA tag rather than FITC (Fig. 4g). Further, we tested whether scrambling the amino acid sequence of these three proteins would affect their localization. We found that for Potri.009G063200 and CUFF.29946, scrambling the amino acid sequence led to reduced or absent import of the protein into L. bicolor hyphae. Scrambled Potri.010G251000 was still found to be imported into hyphae and localize to the nucleus, but at a reduced level (Fig. 4g). Therefore, some of the P. trichocarpa SSPs can enter L. bicolor hyphae.
Populus SSPs can alter the development of multiple fungi
Finally, in pharmacological studies, where L. bicolor hyphae cultures were exposed to the four Populus SSPs that were able to move into the fungal nuclei, Potri.009G063200 and Potri.010G251000 significantly increased the distance between hyphal branches (p < 0.05; Fig. 5a). This effect was dose dependent (Fig. 5b). Scrambling of the amino acid sequence of both Potri.009G063200 and Potri.010G251000 blocked their ability to affect hyphal branching (Fig. 5c). We tested the ability of these two proteins to affect the growth of other ectomycorrhizal fungi; Potri.009G063200 significantly decreased branching distance in Pisolithus microcarpus (Boletales) while Potri.010G251000 increased branch distance of P. microcarpus and it significantly decreased branching distance in Suillus granulatus (Boletales) (p < 0.05; Fig. 5d).
L. bicolor hyphae cultures were exposed to the four Populus SSPs that were able to move into the fungal nuclei also demonstrated that Potri.009G063200 significantly reduced the growth rate of L. bicolor hyphae (p < 0.05; Fig. 6a). This effect was dose dependent (Fig. 6b). Scrambling of the amino acid sequence of Potri.009G063200 blocked its effect on fungal growth rate (Fig. 6c). When both Potri.009G063200 and Potri.010G251000 were tested on other fungal species, Potri.009G063200 significantly reduced the growth of the pathogenic Agaricales Armillaria luteobobulina and S. granulatus (Fig. 6d). Potri.010G251000 increased the growth rate of the ectomycorrhizal P. microcarpus.
Discussion
Mutualistic plant-microbe interactions are common among land plants. Interactions with mutualistic fungi and bacteria afford plant hosts enhanced stress tolerance29,30,31,32, increased growth rate and improved reproductive success33, 34. Our understanding of the mechanisms used by (1) plants to monitor, encourage and establish these relationships and/or (2) mutualistic organisms to colonize plants is limited. It has recently been established that mutualistic mycorrhizal fungi use SSPs to influence host functioning7, 8, 35. In the current study, we used computational predictions and experimental evidence to determine if the model perennial plant P. trichocarpa has an analogous genomic complement of effector-like SSPs. Genomic annotation of plant SSPs has lagged behind that of fungal SSPs. To address this limitation, we used a large RNA sequencing data-set sampled from different stages of P. trichocarpa root colonization by the mutualistic fungus L. bicolor to annotate novel P. trichocarpa SSPs. From a pool of differentially expressed transcripts, we identified 417 SSPs in P. trichocarpa expressed during mutualistic interaction with the ectomycorrhizal fungus L. bicolor. Of these 417 mycorrhiza-induced SSPs, 37% were undocumented in the current P. trichocarpa genome annotation v3.0 (www.Phytozome.net).
To functionally validate these proteins, we first showed that several of these small proteins contained verified secretion signals (Fig. 3), demonstrating the ability of these proteins to move across the membrane of the plant host cell. Secondly, we were able to demonstrate that four of six P. trichocarpa SSPs tested are capable of entering L. bicolor hyphae and localizing to the nuclei (Fig. 4). Interestingly, two of these P. trichocarpa SSPs significantly modified hyphal growth (Figs 5 and 6). A biological implication of this is that SSPs may be used to slow growth of fungal hyphae to prevent excessive growth within the root and thereby prevent parasitism. Alternatively, plant-based SSPs could be used to induce a switch in hyphal growth patterns from rhizospheric runner hyphae to aggregated hyphae on the root surface during the initial steps of symbiosis.
Plants may be exposed to hundreds of microbes at any given moment36,37,38. While only a small fraction of these organisms will attempt to colonize plant tissues, the plant must be able to distinguish between beneficial vs. detrimental microbes. The degree to which the plant is able to respond differently to organisms of different lifestyles (e.g., pathogenic vs. mutualistic) or between organisms of the same lifestyle (e.g., mutualistic vs. neutral) is poorly understood. Host species specificity in the transcriptomic response of the host to different microbes has been observed in the interaction between Vitis vinifera and Burkholderia phytofirmans or Pseudomonas syringae 39, between Arabidopsis thaliana and Trichoderma asperelloides or P. syringae 40, between Hordeum vulgare and Piriformospora indica or Blumeria graminis 41 and between A. thaliana and various viruses42, suggesting that the plant is able to tailor its SSP transcriptomic response to different lifestyles of microbes.
Effector SSPs are a hallmark in the genomes of microbes that associate with plants1. These proteins are typically classified as ≤250 aa in length, are significantly regulated during symbiosis and coded by genes that show genomic evidence of rapid evolution43, 44. Upon secretion, these fungal effectors may remain external to plant cells or they may enter the plant cell. Regardless of their final localization, these proteins alter the functioning of the plant cell and their expression is generally considered crucial for the successful colonization of plant tissues6, 35, 45, 46. The discovery, described herein, of plant-encoded mycorrhiza-induced SSPs that are: (1) ≤250 aa in size, (2) lineage- or genera-specific, (3) highly expressed during symbiosis, (4) able to enter fungal hyphae and localize to the nucleus and (5) affecting fungal morphology strongly support the conclusion that plants encode proteins that are effector-like. This inference is supported by previous work in the legume:rhizobial interaction where small plant proteins have been reported to enter the symbiotic bacterium and affect its growth17,18,19,20,21. Populus can respond to mutualistic fungi by secreting their own effector-like proteins that might parallel the role of fungal effectors (Fig. 7). Our observation of effector SSPs in Populus implies a novel avenue, apart from the traditional immune response44, by which plants communicate with (or control) their mutualistic microbial partners.
Our data further supports previous hypotheses which has suggested that plants are not silent, or ‘naïve’, participants in mutualistic relationships by demonstrating that they too have the genetic tools in the form of effector-like proteins to communicate with and influence their microbial partners. These data are the first steps forward in understanding the role of plant SSPs as effectors in influencing symbiotic relationships. As more transcriptomic and genomic data related to SSPs becomes available, a more complete description of plasticity of plant responses to microbes will be possible. This research highlights the importance of the cross-talk between the plant and fungal effectors. Future studies on the fine-tuned balance between the number and level of the various released effectors could provide deeper insights into the development and the fitness of symbiosis.
Methods
Plant material, RNA extraction and sequencing
For colonization experiments, L. bicolor (Maire) P.D. Orton isolate S238N inoculum was grown on a substrate of peat moss:vermiculite (3:1) containing liquid Pachlewski medium for 3 months47, 48. Dormant hardwood stems from Populus trichocarpa clone 101–74 were collected from stool beds in January. Dormant stems were then cut into 25-cm cuttings with six to seven nodes per cutting. These cuttings were sealed in polyethylene bags and kept in cold storage (0 °C) until they were removed for rooting. The experiments in which these cuttings were used were then performed during the following year. Three node stem cuttings of P. trichocarpa clone 101–74 were pre-rooted for 1 week in a solution of 2.5 mM KNO3, 0.8 mM KH2PO4, 1 mM MgSO4 · 7 H2O, 2.3 mM Ca(NO3)2 · 4 H2O, 23 μM H3BO3, 4.6 μM MnCl2 · 4 H2O, 0.4 μM ZnSO4 · 7 H2O, 0.09 μM (NH4)2 MoO4, 0.18 μM CuSO4 · 5 H2O, 20 μM FeNa.EDTA, pH 5.8 and then planted in a 1 L-pot containing a 9:1 mixture (v:v) of Terra-Green to L. bicolor inoculum as previously described49. The colonization experiment was replicated twice (technical replicate) under climate controlled greenhouse conditions maintaining a 16-hr photoperiod at 22 °C.
Tissues used for transcriptomic profiling were sampled from fine roots of P. trichocarpa between 10 am and 2 pm each day to avoid confounding effects of circadian rhythm on gene expression. Plant host roots, grown in the same substrate and with the same nutrient regime but without fungal inoculum, were harvested as a non-mycorrhizal control for transcriptomic analyses. Three biological replicates of between 50–100 mg of colonized root tips (equivalent to approximately 100 colonized root tips) or of uncolonized lateral roots (control) were harvested at 2, 4 and 12 weeks after L. bicolor inoculation, washed thoroughly, snap frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at −80 °C until total RNA extraction was performed using the RNAeasy kit (Qiagen) per the manufacturer’s instructions. An on-column DNA digestion step with DNAse I (Qiagen) was also included to avoid DNA contamination. RNA quality was verified using Experion HighSens capillary gels (Bio-Rad). For P. trichocarpa RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), three biological replicates of colonized or un-colonized tissues were pooled for sequencing. As mycorrhizal tissues are very recalcitrant to RNA extraction, quantities of RNA recovered were too low for quantities needed for RNA-seq analysis. Therefore, we amplified 250 ng total RNA using the Clonetech SMARTer amplification kit (Ozyme, St Quentin en Yvelines, France), according to manufacturer’s instructions and being sure to maintain the amplification in the logarithmic phase such that RNA pools were still proportional to original quantities of transcript as described previously49. Each pooled sample was sequenced (36-bp single-end reads) using Illumina GAII technology by IGA Technology services (Udine, Italy; GEO Accession Series GSE54789). Also, 100-bp single-end sequencing was also performed using Illumina HiSeq2000 platform (Beckman Coulter Genomics, Danvers, MA, USA) for samples collected 12 weeks after Laccaria inoculation (GEO Accession Series GSE75437).
RNA-seq data analysis and prediction of P. trichocarpa small secreted proteins
The computational pipeline for RNA-seq data analysis and prediction of P. trichocarpa SSPs is illustrated in Fig. 1a. RNA-seq reads were mapped to the P. trichocarpa genome50 using TopHat51 and novel transcripts were discovered using Cufflinks52, 53. Differentially expressed genes between treatment (i.e., P. trichocarpa roots with L. bicolor ectomycorrhizas) and control (i.e., P. trichocarpa roots without L. bicolor inoculation) were identified using Cuffdiff52. The open reading frames (ORFs) were annotated using six-frame translation based on standard genetic code with a length range of 10–10,000 aa. The best ORF for each transcript was chosen based on those ORFs with the highest score in a BLASTp search using the default setting against the UniRef90 database (http://www.uniprot.org) or the longest ORF if there were no BLASTp hits.
The subcellular localizations of proteins were predicted using three different methods: (1) LocTree225, (2) CELLO26 and (3) YLoc27 using default parameters. Proteins with full-length sequences of ≤250 aa were defined as small proteins (SmPs). The predicted small secreted proteins (SSPs) were divided into three sets: high-confidence set (SSP_hc) including proteins with subcellular localization as “secreted” predicted by method 1 and “extracellular space” by both method 2 and method 3; medium-confidence set (SSP_mc) proteins with subcellular localization as “secreted” predicted by method 1 and “extracellular space” by method 2 or method 3; and low-confidence set (SSP_lc) proteins with subcellular localization as “secreted” predicted by method 1, but no “extracellular” prediction by either method 2 or method 3.
Protein domain and Gene Ontology analysis
A protein-domain search for all SSP sequences against the Pfam 28.0 database54 was performed with an E-value cutoff of 1e-10. Gene Ontology (GO) annotation was performed using Blast2GO with a BLASTp E-value hit filter of 1e-6, an annotation cutoff value of 55, and GO weight of 555. GO enrichment analysis was performed using BiNGO56.
Identification of homologs of Populus SSP genes in other plant species
The representative protein sequences (i.e., the longest protein sequence in case of multiple transcripts annotated for one gene locus) in 16 species (Arabidopsis thaliana, Arabidopsis lyrata, Gossypium raimondii, Theobroma cacao, Populus trichocarpa, Glycine max, Fragaria vesca, Eucalyptus grandis, Vitis vinifera, Solanum tuberosum, Zea mays, Sorghum bicolor, Oryza sativa, Brachypodium distachyon, Selaginella moellendorffii, Physcomitrella patens) were downloaded from Phytozome v9.0 (www.Phytozome.net). The homologs were identified using BLASTp57 with e-value cutoff of 1e-10.
Comparative analysis of SSP genes among different Populus genotypes
Populus genome resequencing data58, 59 was used to reveal genomic differences in the region of selected genes. Two P. trichocarpa genotypes (Nisqually-1 and 93–968) and two P. deltoides genotypes (ILL-101 and D124) were selected for the analysis. The Illumina reads were aligned to the reference P. trichocarpa genome sequence50 to generate bam files using the MAQ software package60. Per base sequence coverage for mapped reads in the region corresponding to the selected genes were obtained using bedtools61.
Testing of protein secretion using a yeast expression system
To construct a Gateway compatible vector for yeast secretion assay, a DNA fragment containing the SUC gene without signal peptide was synthesized by GeneScript (Piscataway, NJ, USA) and validated by sequencing. The DNA fragment was ligated into pGAD-424 vector by SphI. Candidate SSPs were cloned into the secretion vector, with the SSP gene fused with the N-terminus of SUC gene, by Gateway cloning and transformed into the suc2 yeast mutant (strain ATCC-96100). Positive transformants were selected and validated on a synthetic dropout medium. Transformants were assayed on plates with glucose (10 mM) and sucrose (10 mM) as carbon supplies respectively and growth activity was measured after growing 2–3 days at 28 °C.
L. bicolor uptake of P. trichocarpa SSPs and growth analysis tests
In order to determine if P. trichocarpa SSPs could cross the L. bicolor hyphal membrane, five proteins (CUFF.29946, Potri.009G063200, Potri.010G251000, Potri.019G121200 and Potri.007G006800) were produced by cell-free recombinant peptide synthesis (Eurogentec) without the secretion signal and amino-terminal covalent addition of FITC using standard amino acid coupling techniques or with the addition of an HA tag (C-terminal addition of the following amino acid sequence: YPYDVPDYA). CUFF.29946, Potri.009G063200 and Potri.010G251000 were also produced in this method as a ‘scrambled’ (scr) version whereby the amino acids were randomly re-ordered and synthesized in a new sequence. Potri.019G121200 was used as a negative control, which contains a FASCICLIN-LIKE ARABINOGALACTAN PROTEIN 12 domain (www.phytozome.net), and it was predicted to be a cell adhesion protein and was not expected to be imported by fungal hyphae. The peptides were purified using HPLC fractionation to ensure the purity of the synthesis product. A control of the FITC fluorophore or of dilution buffer was also used throughout the experiments to ensure that this tag nor the buffer were altering our results.
To test subcellular localizations of these P. trichocarpa SSPs in L. bicolor hyphae and the role of these proteins in affecting fungal morphology (for L. bicolor, P. microcarpus, A. luteobobulina, S. granulatus), fungal colonies grown on cellophane membranes on ½ MMN agar plates at 25 °C until the colonies were 2–3 cm in diameter (2 weeks). Five biological replicates (i.e., independent colonies) were treated with an individual synthetic protein or FITC or buffer alone (controls) by dripping 10 µL of a solution of the protein (concentrations varying between 1 µM and 0.001 µM as outlined in the text) on the leading edge of the fungal colony. This treatment was repeated daily for four days after which the growth of the leading fungal edge and the hyphal branching were measured using ImageJ. The protein, FITC or buffer solutions were produced fresh daily and never re-used to avoid degradation of the protein.
For the localization experiment, the same aged L. bicolor colonies were treated by placing a 10 µL drop of either 1 µM protein or 1 µM FITC (PBS, pH7) on the leading edge of an in-tact, un-perturbed fungal colony grown as described above. After 4 hour of incubation, colonies were washed in excess PBS two times for five minutes each. The treated hyphae were then cut away from the rest of the colony and were fixed overnight in 4% (w/v) paraformaldehyde at 4 °C. Post fixing, samples were washed 3 × 10 min in PBS and then stained in 0.1% propidium iodide for 20 min then imaged using an inverted Leica TCS SP5 laser scanning confocal microscope. Fluorescent excitation was achieved using a 488 nm beam (10% power) for FITC and a 561 nm beam for propidium iodide. Emission was recovered between 510–530 nm for FITC and between 610–630 nm for propidium iodide. To corroborate fluorescent cell entry tests, L. bicolor colonies were exposed to HA-tagged proteins as above. Rather than fixing the samples, they were ground in liquid nitrogen and cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins were extracted as per Wang and colleagues62. Equal quantities of total protein were separated on a 1D Bio-Rad gradient gel (4–20%) and then transferred to a PVDF membrane. Membranes were blocked and then probed with either α-HA (to detect the presence of the SSP) or α-Histone H3 primary antibody (to ascertain the purity of the cytoplasmic vs. nuclear protein fraction). Bands were developed using the Clarity ECL Blotting substrate (Bio-Rad) as per manufacturer’s instructions and chemiluminescent images were taken using the Bio-Rad ChemiDoc Imaging system with an exposure of between 15–20 s.
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Acknowledgements
This research was sponsored by the Genomic Science Program, US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research as part of the Plant-Microbe Interfaces Scientific Focus Area (http://pmi.ornl.gov). Oak Ridge National Laboratory is managed by UT-Battelle, LLC, for the US Department of Energy under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725. FM’s research group is also funded by the Laboratory of Excellence ARBRE (ANR-11-LABX-0002-01) and the Region Lorraine Research Council. JMP’s research is funded by the Australian Research Council (DE150100408), Western Sydney University and the Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment. ICA acknowledges funding from the Australian Research Council. The authors would like to acknowledge the Western Sydney University Confocal Bio-Imaging Facility for access to its instrumentation and staff. FM would like to thank the Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment research exchange program for funding his research stay at Western Sydney University. Stem cuttings were supplied by F. Le Tacon and P. Vion.
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Jonathan M. Plett, Xiaohan Yang, Gerald A. Tuskan and Francis Martin designed research. Jonathan M. Plett and Annegret Kohler performed RNA sequencing. Ting Li, Priya Ranjan, Hao-Bo Guo and Xiaohan Yang performed computational analysis. Jonathan M. Plett, Hengfu Yin, Ritesh Mewalal, Rongbin Hu, Sara Jawdy, Chun Ju Chen, Henrique C. De Paoli, George Butler and Tessa Maureen Burch-Smith performed experimental analysis. Jonathan M. Plett, Hengfu Yin and Ritesh Mewalal wrote the paper. Ian C. Anderson and Jessy L. Labbé, Xiaohan Yang, Gerald A. Tuskan and Francis Martin discussed the results and edited the manuscript.
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Plett, J.M., Yin, H., Mewalal, R. et al. Populus trichocarpa encodes small, effector-like secreted proteins that are highly induced during mutualistic symbiosis. Sci Rep 7, 382 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-00400-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-00400-8
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