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Extracellular VirB5 Enhances T-DNA Transfer from Agrobacterium to the Host Plant

VirB5 is a type 4 secretion system protein of Agrobacterium located on the surface of the bacterial cell. This localization pattern suggests a function for VirB5 which is beyond its known role in biogenesis and/or stabilization of the T-pilus and which may involve early interactions between Agrobact...

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Autores principales: Lacroix, Benoît, Citovsky, Vitaly
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3196495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22028781
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025578
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author Lacroix, Benoît
Citovsky, Vitaly
author_facet Lacroix, Benoît
Citovsky, Vitaly
author_sort Lacroix, Benoît
collection PubMed
description VirB5 is a type 4 secretion system protein of Agrobacterium located on the surface of the bacterial cell. This localization pattern suggests a function for VirB5 which is beyond its known role in biogenesis and/or stabilization of the T-pilus and which may involve early interactions between Agrobacterium and the host cell. Here, we identify VirB5 as the first Agrobacterium virulence protein that can enhance infectivity extracellularly. Specifically, we show that elevating the amounts of the extracellular VirB5—by exogenous addition of the purified protein, its overexpression in the bacterium, or transgenic expression in and secretion out of the host cell—enhances the efficiency the Agrobacterium-mediated T-DNA transfer, as measured by transient expression of genes contained on the transferred T-DNA molecule. Importantly, the exogenous VirB5 enhanced transient T-DNA expression in sugar beet, a major crop recalcitrant to genetic manipulation. Increasing the pool of the extracellular VirB5 did not complement an Agrobacterium virB5 mutant, suggesting a dual function for VirB5: in the bacterium and at the bacterium-host cell interface. Consistent with this idea, VirB5 expressed in the host cell, but not secreted, had no effect on the transformation efficiency. That the increase in T-DNA expression promoted by the exogenous VirB5 was not due to its effects on bacterial growth, virulence gene induction, bacterial attachment to plant tissue, or host cell defense response suggests that VirB5 participates in the early steps of the T-DNA transfer to the plant cell.
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spelling pubmed-31964952011-10-25 Extracellular VirB5 Enhances T-DNA Transfer from Agrobacterium to the Host Plant Lacroix, Benoît Citovsky, Vitaly PLoS One Research Article VirB5 is a type 4 secretion system protein of Agrobacterium located on the surface of the bacterial cell. This localization pattern suggests a function for VirB5 which is beyond its known role in biogenesis and/or stabilization of the T-pilus and which may involve early interactions between Agrobacterium and the host cell. Here, we identify VirB5 as the first Agrobacterium virulence protein that can enhance infectivity extracellularly. Specifically, we show that elevating the amounts of the extracellular VirB5—by exogenous addition of the purified protein, its overexpression in the bacterium, or transgenic expression in and secretion out of the host cell—enhances the efficiency the Agrobacterium-mediated T-DNA transfer, as measured by transient expression of genes contained on the transferred T-DNA molecule. Importantly, the exogenous VirB5 enhanced transient T-DNA expression in sugar beet, a major crop recalcitrant to genetic manipulation. Increasing the pool of the extracellular VirB5 did not complement an Agrobacterium virB5 mutant, suggesting a dual function for VirB5: in the bacterium and at the bacterium-host cell interface. Consistent with this idea, VirB5 expressed in the host cell, but not secreted, had no effect on the transformation efficiency. That the increase in T-DNA expression promoted by the exogenous VirB5 was not due to its effects on bacterial growth, virulence gene induction, bacterial attachment to plant tissue, or host cell defense response suggests that VirB5 participates in the early steps of the T-DNA transfer to the plant cell. Public Library of Science 2011-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3196495/ /pubmed/22028781 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025578 Text en Lacroix, Citovsky. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lacroix, Benoît
Citovsky, Vitaly
Extracellular VirB5 Enhances T-DNA Transfer from Agrobacterium to the Host Plant
title Extracellular VirB5 Enhances T-DNA Transfer from Agrobacterium to the Host Plant
title_full Extracellular VirB5 Enhances T-DNA Transfer from Agrobacterium to the Host Plant
title_fullStr Extracellular VirB5 Enhances T-DNA Transfer from Agrobacterium to the Host Plant
title_full_unstemmed Extracellular VirB5 Enhances T-DNA Transfer from Agrobacterium to the Host Plant
title_short Extracellular VirB5 Enhances T-DNA Transfer from Agrobacterium to the Host Plant
title_sort extracellular virb5 enhances t-dna transfer from agrobacterium to the host plant
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3196495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22028781
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025578
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