Analysis of secreted proteins of Magnaporthe grisea and the search for protein effectors

Magnaporthe grisea is a notorious pathogenic fungus that causes rice blast disease worldwide. Proteins secreted by the fungus are likely candidates for being effectors that are potentially recognized by determinants of resistance or susceptibility in host plants. However, knowledge of the role of se...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shang, Yue
Other Authors: Ebbole, Daniel J
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5827
id ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-5827
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-58272013-01-08T10:38:48ZAnalysis of secreted proteins of Magnaporthe grisea and the search for protein effectorsShang, YueSecreted ProteinsEffectorMagnaporthe griseaMagnaporthe grisea is a notorious pathogenic fungus that causes rice blast disease worldwide. Proteins secreted by the fungus are likely candidates for being effectors that are potentially recognized by determinants of resistance or susceptibility in host plants. However, knowledge of the role of secreted proteins of M. grisea is still limited. In this study, I identified 29 proteins that were secreted into culture filtrates from M. grisea strains expressing candidate proteins. I confirmed secretion of these proteins and tested them for elicitor activity on plants. Among them, I studied two groups: cell wall degrading enzymes (CWDEs) and small cysteine-rich proteins. Cysteine-rich proteins have been shown in other systems to function as elicitors. Initially, I expressed and purified proteins in M. grisea to obtain proteins by a homologous expression system. Although this was effective for a number of proteins, the need for greater amounts of protein led me to express several proteins in the Pichia pastoris system. Several candidate proteins were purified and found to induce symptoms on rice and maize. Hypothetical proteins MG10424.4 and MG09998.4 were both found to have elicitor activity. Lipase MG07016.4 did not induce response of plants and we concluded that the lipase activity of MG07016.4 does not function as an elicitor. I also purified a small cysteine-rich protein, which belongs to the group of cluster 180 proteins in M. grisea, MG10732.4 from P. pastoris. It is able to cause yellowing symptoms and hydrogen peroxide production in plants and it might contain elicitor activity.Texas A&M UniversityEbbole, Daniel J2007-09-17T19:34:22Z2007-09-17T19:34:22Z2003-052007-09-17T19:34:22ZBookThesisElectronic Thesistext11854216 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5827en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Secreted Proteins
Effector
Magnaporthe grisea
spellingShingle Secreted Proteins
Effector
Magnaporthe grisea
Shang, Yue
Analysis of secreted proteins of Magnaporthe grisea and the search for protein effectors
description Magnaporthe grisea is a notorious pathogenic fungus that causes rice blast disease worldwide. Proteins secreted by the fungus are likely candidates for being effectors that are potentially recognized by determinants of resistance or susceptibility in host plants. However, knowledge of the role of secreted proteins of M. grisea is still limited. In this study, I identified 29 proteins that were secreted into culture filtrates from M. grisea strains expressing candidate proteins. I confirmed secretion of these proteins and tested them for elicitor activity on plants. Among them, I studied two groups: cell wall degrading enzymes (CWDEs) and small cysteine-rich proteins. Cysteine-rich proteins have been shown in other systems to function as elicitors. Initially, I expressed and purified proteins in M. grisea to obtain proteins by a homologous expression system. Although this was effective for a number of proteins, the need for greater amounts of protein led me to express several proteins in the Pichia pastoris system. Several candidate proteins were purified and found to induce symptoms on rice and maize. Hypothetical proteins MG10424.4 and MG09998.4 were both found to have elicitor activity. Lipase MG07016.4 did not induce response of plants and we concluded that the lipase activity of MG07016.4 does not function as an elicitor. I also purified a small cysteine-rich protein, which belongs to the group of cluster 180 proteins in M. grisea, MG10732.4 from P. pastoris. It is able to cause yellowing symptoms and hydrogen peroxide production in plants and it might contain elicitor activity.
author2 Ebbole, Daniel J
author_facet Ebbole, Daniel J
Shang, Yue
author Shang, Yue
author_sort Shang, Yue
title Analysis of secreted proteins of Magnaporthe grisea and the search for protein effectors
title_short Analysis of secreted proteins of Magnaporthe grisea and the search for protein effectors
title_full Analysis of secreted proteins of Magnaporthe grisea and the search for protein effectors
title_fullStr Analysis of secreted proteins of Magnaporthe grisea and the search for protein effectors
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of secreted proteins of Magnaporthe grisea and the search for protein effectors
title_sort analysis of secreted proteins of magnaporthe grisea and the search for protein effectors
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5827
work_keys_str_mv AT shangyue analysisofsecretedproteinsofmagnaporthegriseaandthesearchforproteineffectors
_version_ 1716503657747316736