Frontiers in Plant Science (Jun 2023)

Structural mechanism of heavy metal-associated integrated domain engineering of paired nucleotide-binding and leucine-rich repeat proteins in rice

  • Liwei Guo,
  • Liwei Guo,
  • Yuanyu Mu,
  • Yuanyu Mu,
  • Dongli Wang,
  • Chen Ye,
  • Chen Ye,
  • Shusheng Zhu,
  • Shusheng Zhu,
  • Hong Cai,
  • Hong Cai,
  • Youyong Zhu,
  • Youyong Zhu,
  • Youliang Peng,
  • Junfeng Liu,
  • Xiahong He,
  • Xiahong He,
  • Xiahong He

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2023.1187372
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Plant nucleotide-binding and leucine-rich repeat (NLR) proteins are immune sensors that detect pathogen effectors and initiate a strong immune response. In many cases, single NLR proteins are sufficient for both effector recognition and signaling activation. These proteins possess a conserved architecture, including a C-terminal leucine-rich repeat (LRR) domain, a central nucleotide-binding (NB) domain, and a variable N-terminal domain. Nevertheless, many paired NLRs linked in a head-to-head configuration have now been identified. The ones carrying integrated domains (IDs) can recognize pathogen effector proteins by various modes; these are known as sensor NLR (sNLR) proteins. Structural and biochemical studies have provided insights into the molecular basis of heavy metal-associated IDs (HMA IDs) from paired NLRs in rice and revealed the co-evolution between pathogens and hosts by combining naturally occurring favorable interactions across diverse interfaces. Focusing on structural and molecular models, here we highlight advances in structure-guided engineering to expand and enhance the response profile of paired NLR-HMA IDs in rice to variants of the rice blast pathogen MAX-effectors (Magnaporthe oryzae AVRs and ToxB-like). These results demonstrate that the HMA IDs-based design of rice materials with broad and enhanced resistance profiles possesses great application potential but also face considerable challenges.

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