Thr38 and Ser198 are Pto autophosphorylation sites required for the AvrPto–Pto-mediated hypersensitive response
Open Access
- 15 May 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in The EMBO Journal
- Vol. 19 (10) , 2257-2269
- https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/19.10.2257
Abstract
The tomato Pto kinase confers resistance to Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato expressing the AvrPto protein. To elucidate the role of Pto autophosphorylation in disease resistance, eight sites autophosphorylated by Pto in vitro were identified by a combination of HPLC purification of tryptic phosphopeptides, MALDI‐TOF/MS analysis and Edman degradation. Mutational analysis of the autophosphorylation sites revealed that Pto residues Thr38 and Ser198 are required for AvrPto–Pto‐ mediated elicitation of a hypersensitive response in the plant. Thr38, which is the main Pto autophosporylation site and is located outside the kinase catalytic domain, was also required for Pto kinase activity and its physical interaction with AvrPto, the Pti1 kinase and the transcription factor Pti4. Ser198, located in the Pto activation domain, was dispensable for kinase activity and for interaction with AvrPto. However, a mutation at this site resulted in altered Pto interactions with the Pti1 kinase and the Pto interactors of unknown function Pti3 and Pti10. These results suggest that autophosphorylation events at Pto Thr38 and Ser198 are required for signal transduction by Pto and participate in distinct molecular mechanisms.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Functional analysis of plant disease resistance genes and their downstream effectorsCurrent Opinion in Plant Biology, 1999
- Molecular mechanisms involved in bacterial speck disease resistance of tomatoPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1998
- Biochemical Properties of Two Protein Kinases Involved in Disease Resistance Signaling in TomatoPublished by Elsevier ,1998
- Interaction Trap/Two‐Hybrid System to Identify Interacting ProteinsCurrent Protocols in Neuroscience, 1997
- Alleles of Pto and Fen occur in bacterial speck-susceptible and fenthion-insensitive tomato cultivars and encode active protein kinases.Plant Cell, 1997
- SWISS‐MODEL and the Swiss‐Pdb Viewer: An environment for comparative protein modelingElectrophoresis, 1997
- Initiation of Plant Disease Resistance by Physical Interaction of AvrPto and Pto KinaseScience, 1996
- The tomato gene Pti1 encodes a serine/threonine kinase that is phosphorylated by Pto and is involved in the hypersensitive responseCell, 1995
- The Pto Bacterial Resistance Gene and the Fen Insecticide Sensitivity Gene Encode Functional Protein Kinases with Serine/Threonine SpecificityPlant Physiology, 1995
- Protein kinase regulation: insights from crystal structure analysisCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 1994