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Publication no. M-2003-1222-01R
Mutations in the Pseudomonas syringae avrRpt2 gene That Dissociate Its
Virulence and Avirulence Activities Lead to Decreased Efficiency in
AvrRpt2-Induced Disappearance of RIN4. Melisa T. S. Lim and Barbara N.
Kunkel. Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO
63130, U.S.A. MPMI 17:313-321. Submitted 29 May 2003. Accepted 20 October 2003.
Copyright 2004 The American Phytopathological Society.
The avrRpt2 gene from Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato
exhibits avirulence activity on Arabidopsis expressing the resistance
gene RPS2 but promotes bacterial virulence on susceptible rps2 Arabidopsis.
To understand the functional relationship between the avirulence and virulence
activities of avrRpt2, we analyzed a series of six avrRpt2 mutants
deficient in eliciting the RPS2-dependent hypersensitive response. We
show that the mutants are also severely impaired in triggering RSP2-dependent
resistance. Four of these mutants are severely impaired in their virulence
activity, whereas two alleles, encoding C-terminal deletions of AvrRpt2, retain
significant but slightly reduced virulence activity. Thus, the avirulence and
virulence activities of avrRpt2 can be genetically uncoupled. We tested
the ability of the two C-terminal deletion mutants to trigger AvrRpt2-induced
elimination of the Arabidopsis RIN4 protein and show that they retain
this activity but are less efficient than wild-type AvrRpt2. Thus, reduced
AvrRpt2 virulence activity is correlated with reduced efficiency in the
induction of RIN4 disappearance. This suggests that an alteration in kinetics of
RIN4 disappearance triggered by the C-terminal deletion mutants may provide the
mechanistic basis for the uncoupling of the avirulence and virulence activities
of avrRpt2. Additional keywords: avrRpm1, RPM1.
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