Cell Reports (Oct 2018)

Agrobacterium Delivers Anchorage Protein VirE3 for Companion VirE2 to Aggregate at Host Entry Sites for T-DNA Protection

  • Xiaoyang Li,
  • Haitao Tu,
  • Shen Q. Pan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 2
pp. 302 – 311.e6

Abstract

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Summary: Agrobacterium tumefaciens transfers oncogenic DNA (T-DNA) and effector proteins into various host plants. T-DNA is generated inside the bacteria and subsequently delivered into plant cells along with the companion effectors VirD2, VirE2, and VirE3. However, it is not clear how the T-complex consisting of VirD2 and VirE2 is assembled inside plant cells. Here, we report that the effector protein VirE3 localized to plant plasma membranes as an anchorage through a conserved α-helical-bundle domain. VirE3 interacted with itself and enabled VirE2 accumulation at host entry sites through direct interactions. VirE3 was critical for VirE2 function in T-DNA protection. Our data indicate that VirE3 functions as a previously unrecognized anchorage protein consisting of membrane-binding, self-interacting, and VirE2-interacting domains. Both VirE2 and VirE3 are conserved among Agrobacterium and rhizobia species but not other organisms, suggesting that a group of anchorage proteins have been generated through evolution to facilitate the nucleoprotein assembly at plant membranes. : Agrobacterium transfers T-DNA and virulence proteins into host cells. Li et al. show that a virulence protein, VirE3, anchors its companion protein VirE2 on host membranes at the entrance to facilitate T-DNA protection. VirE3 represents a class of proteins, anchorage proteins, which are present only in agrobacteria and rhizobia. Keywords: anchorage protein, Agrobacterium, VirE3, VirE2, T-complex, T-DNA, plasma membrane