Abstract
Upon encountering a susceptible plant host, a bacterial pathogen expresses specific virulence factors. For example, in planta, the Xanthomonas HrpX protein activates transcription of roughly 150 genes encoding components of the type III secretion system or its translocated effectors, as well as other secreted proteins implicated in pathogenesis. Here, we show that X. oryzae pv. oryzae growth in planta or in HrpX-inducing XOM2 media resulted in HrpX-dependent transcription of the raxX and raxST genes that control production of the RaxX sulfopeptide, exported through a type I secretion system. The RaxX protein is required for activation of XA21-mediated immunity in Xa21+ rice lines. We identified potential plant-inducible promoter elements upstream of the likely 59 ends of the raxX and raxST transcripts. Deletions and nucleotide substitutions confirmed that these elements are required for HrpX-dependent expression of raxX and raxST. We conclude that raxX-raxST gene expression is induced by HrpX during growth in planta and, therefore, is coordinately expressed with other genes required for pathogenesis.
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Joe, A., Stewart, V., & Ronald, P. C. (2021). The HrpX Protein Activates Synthesis of the RaxX Sulfopeptide, Required for Activation of XA21-Mediated Immunity to Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae. Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions, 34(11), 1307–1315. https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI-05-21-0124-R
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