Chitin-Binding Protein ofVerticillium nonalfalfaeDisguises Fungus from Plant Chitinases and Suppresses Chitin-Triggered Host Immunity

name=Physiology 0301 basic medicine /dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1300/1314 570 Plants/enzymology molekularna imunologija Fungus–plant interactions Chitin Verticillium Microbiology Fungal effectors hmelj Fungal Proteins 03 medical and health sciences molekulske osnove imunosti info:eu-repo/classification/udc/577.27 mechanisms of pathogenicity Mechanisms of pathogenicity verticillium nonalfalfae fungus–plant interactions Fungal Proteins/metabolism Plant Diseases /dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1100/1102 Chitinases glivične bolezni Botany Plants Plant Diseases/microbiology QR1-502 Molecular Docking Simulation name=Agronomy and Crop Science fungal effectors QK1-989 bolezni rastlin Carrier Proteins Chitin/metabolism
DOI: 10.1094/mpmi-03-19-0079-r Publication Date: 2019-05-07T17:39:36Z
ABSTRACT
During fungal infections, plant cells secrete chitinases, which digest chitin in the fungal cell walls. The recognition of released chitin oligomers via lysin motif (LysM)-containing immune host receptors results in the activation of defense signaling pathways. We report here that Verticillium nonalfalfae, a hemibiotrophic xylem-invading fungus, prevents these digestion and recognition processes by secreting a carbohydrate-binding motif 18 (CBM18)-chitin-binding protein, VnaChtBP, which is transcriptionally activated specifically during the parasitic life stages. VnaChtBP is encoded by the Vna8.213 gene, which is highly conserved within the species, suggesting high evolutionary stability and importance for the fungal lifestyle. In a pathogenicity assay, however, Vna8.213 knockout mutants exhibited wilting symptoms similar to the wild-type fungus, suggesting that Vna8.213 activity is functionally redundant during fungal infection of hop. In a binding assay, recombinant VnaChtBP bound chitin and chitin oligomers in vitro with submicromolar affinity and protected fungal hyphae from degradation by plant chitinases. Moreover, the chitin-triggered production of reactive oxygen species from hop suspension cells was abolished in the presence of VnaChtBP, indicating that VnaChtBP also acts as a suppressor of chitin-triggered immunity. Using a yeast-two-hybrid assay, circular dichroism, homology modeling, and molecular docking, we demonstrated that VnaChtBP forms dimers in the absence of ligands and that this interaction is stabilized by the binding of chitin hexamers with a similar preference in the two binding sites. Our data suggest that, in addition to chitin-binding LysM (CBM50) and Avr4 (CBM14) fungal effectors, structurally unrelated CBM18 effectors have convergently evolved to prevent hydrolysis of the fungal cell wall against plant chitinases and to interfere with chitin-triggered host immunity.
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