Cecile Lorrain

Fungal regulatory genomics & evolution

Structural genomics applied to the rust fungus Melampsora larici-populina reveals two candidate effector proteins adopting cystine knot and NTF2-like protein folds


Journal article


K. de Guillen, Cécile Lorrain, P. Tsan, P. Barthe, Benjamin Petre, N. Saveleva, N. Rouhier, S. Duplessis, A. Padilla, Arnaud Hecker
Scientific Reports, 2019

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
de Guillen, K., Lorrain, C., Tsan, P., Barthe, P., Petre, B., Saveleva, N., … Hecker, A. (2019). Structural genomics applied to the rust fungus Melampsora larici-populina reveals two candidate effector proteins adopting cystine knot and NTF2-like protein folds. Scientific Reports.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Guillen, K. de, Cécile Lorrain, P. Tsan, P. Barthe, Benjamin Petre, N. Saveleva, N. Rouhier, S. Duplessis, A. Padilla, and Arnaud Hecker. “Structural Genomics Applied to the Rust Fungus Melampsora Larici-Populina Reveals Two Candidate Effector Proteins Adopting Cystine Knot and NTF2-like Protein Folds.” Scientific Reports (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
de Guillen, K., et al. “Structural Genomics Applied to the Rust Fungus Melampsora Larici-Populina Reveals Two Candidate Effector Proteins Adopting Cystine Knot and NTF2-like Protein Folds.” Scientific Reports, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{k2019a,
  title = {Structural genomics applied to the rust fungus Melampsora larici-populina reveals two candidate effector proteins adopting cystine knot and NTF2-like protein folds},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {Scientific Reports},
  author = {de Guillen, K. and Lorrain, Cécile and Tsan, P. and Barthe, P. and Petre, Benjamin and Saveleva, N. and Rouhier, N. and Duplessis, S. and Padilla, A. and Hecker, Arnaud}
}

Abstract

Rust fungi are plant pathogens that secrete an arsenal of effector proteins interfering with plant functions and promoting parasitic infection. Effectors are often species-specific, evolve rapidly, and display low sequence similarities with known proteins. How rust fungal effectors function in host cells remains elusive, and biochemical and structural approaches have been scarcely used to tackle this question. In this study, we produced recombinant proteins of eleven candidate effectors of the leaf rust fungus Melampsora larici-populina in Escherichia coli. We successfully purified and solved the three-dimensional structure of two proteins, MLP124266 and MLP124017, using NMR spectroscopy. Although both MLP124266 and MLP124017 show no sequence similarity with known proteins, they exhibit structural similarities to knottins, which are disulfide-rich small proteins characterized by intricate disulfide bridges, and to nuclear transport factor 2-like proteins, which are molecular containers involved in a wide range of functions, respectively. Interestingly, such structural folds have not been reported so far in pathogen effectors, indicating that MLP124266 and MLP124017 may bear novel functions related to pathogenicity. Our findings show that sequence-unrelated effectors can adopt folds similar to known proteins, and encourage the use of biochemical and structural approaches to functionally characterize effector candidates.