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| Subject Categories:
Membranes & Transport
| Microbiology & Pathogens
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The EMBO Journal
(2002) 21, 5313–5322, doi: 10.1093/emboj/cdf536
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| Getting acrossbacterial type III effector proteins on their way to the plant cell |
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Daniela Büttner and Ulla Bonas
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Institut für Genetik, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, D-06099 Halle (Saale), Germany
To whom correspondence should be addressed
Ulla Bonas, bonas@genetik.uni-halle.de
Received 4 June 2002; Revised 13 August 2002; Accepted 19 August 2002.
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| Abstract |
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| Pathogenicity of most Gram-negative bacterial plant pathogens depends on hrp (hypersensitive response and pathogenicity) genes, which control the ability to cause disease and to elicit specific defense responses in resistant plants. hrp genes encode a specialized type III secretion (TTS) system that mediates the vectorial delivery of bacterial effector proteins across both bacterial membranes as well as across the eukaryotic plasma membrane into the host cell cytosol. One well-studied effector protein is AvrBs3 from Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria, the causal agent of bacterial spot in pepper and tomato. AvrBs3 induces hypertrophy symptoms in susceptible plants and triggers a resistance gene-specific cell death reaction in resistant plants. Intriguingly, AvrBs3 has characteristic features of eukaryotic transcription factors, suggesting that it modulates the host's transcriptome. Here, we discuss the TTS system of X.campestris pv. vesicatoria in the light of current knowledge on type III-dependent protein secretion in plant pathogenic bacteria. |
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| Keywords: AvrBs3, hrp genes, pathogenicity island, PIP box, secretion |
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