Abstract
Plasmopara viticola is a biotrophic oomycete pathogen causing grapevine downy mildew. We characterized the repertoire of P. viticola effector proteins which may be translocated into plants to support the disease. We found several secreted proteins that contain canonical dEER motifs and conserved WY-domains but lack the characteristic RXLR motif reported previously from oomycete effectors. We cloned four candidates and showed that one of them, Pv33, induces plant cell death in grapevine and Nicotiana species. This activity is dependent on the nuclear localization of the protein. Sequence similar effectors were present in seven European, but in none of the tested American isolates. Together our work contributes a new type of conserved P. viticola effector candidates.
Introduction
Effectors are proteins produced by phytopathogens to manipulate host plants in support of infection. They exert their function by modifying plant physiology and nutrient absorption, as well as by suppressing plant defences [1]. Plants perceive pathogens through recognition of microbial molecular signatures, called PAMPs/MAMPs (Pathogen/Microbe-Associated-Molecular-Pattern) and initiate defence responses in the infection area. Plants also perceive the disturbances caused by penetration and release DAMPs (Damage-Associated -Molecular-Patterns) [2]. Several pathogen effector proteins can interfere with these plant perception mechanisms and the initiated defence responses, resulting in a suppressed plant immunity and infection success. Effectors or their activities may however be detected by plant disease resistance proteins, activating effector-triggered immunity often concomitant with an infection-limiting cell death called hypersensitive response (HR). These events are summarized in the zig-zag model for plant-pathogen interactions [3].
Known oomycete effectors are either secreted into the plant apoplast or reach the plant cell cytoplasm. Two main families of cytoplasmic effectors have been described: CRNs (Crinkling and Necrosis Inducing) and RXLR effectors. Both are characterised by the presence of a conserved amino acid motif on their N-termini, LXLFLAK-DWL for CRNs, and RXLR often followed by dEER for RXLRs. Genetic evidence supports the importance of these motifs in host translocation. Their role in host cell uptake, however, is debated [4–7].
RXLR effectors are the best studied family. The RXLR candidate effector repertoire from several plant pathogenic oomycete species has been reported, and numerous studies in different pathosystems described their contribution to suppressing plant immunity and enhancing pathogen virulence [8,9], their subcellular localisation in the plant cell [10] and the molecular targets of their effector function [9,11,12]. Crystal structures obtained for several RXLR effectors identified a common fold in the C-terminus of many RXLR effector proteins, the WY-domain. This domain may appear either as a single domain or in tandem repeats, and it has been found in the C-terminus of 44% of Phytophthora infestans and 26% of H. arabidopsidis RXLR effectors [13].
The RXLR motif is well conserved and defined within Phytophthora species; most RXLR effectors from those species present the canonical motif at the N-terminus. However, this does not seem to be the case for downy mildews. Other motifs, more or less reminiscent of the RXLR, have been reported, like the QXLR and KXLR motifs detected in Pseudoperonospora cubensis [14] and the GKLR found in effectors from Bremia lactucae [15]. Furthermore, ATR5 from Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis possesses an EER motif but appears to lack a particular motif in position of the RXLR [16]. More recently, the existence of proteins with a WY-domain but lacking RXLR motifs has been reported in the secretomes of Peronospora tabacina and Plasmopara halstedii [17–19].
Plasmopara viticola is an obligate biotrophic oomycete causing grapevine downy mildew. It is present worldwide, attacks all plant organs and is mainly controlled with pesticides. Despite the economic importance of grapevine downy mildew, our understanding of this pathosystem is limited, mainly due to the difficulties of manipulating both host plant and pathogen. In recent years there has been an important increase in the availability of genomic [20–22] and transcriptomic [23,24] resources for P. viticola, leading to the identification of its RXLR candidate effector repertoire [25,22,26]. The putative role of these effectors as suppressors of defence responses and their subcellular localisation have been reported [26,27], and some notable results include the identification of RXLR effectors inducing or suppressing plant immune responses [27,28].
A sound knowledge of the RXLR effector repertoire and function is essential to understand the mechanisms that govern the grape / P. viticola interaction and ultimately to develop new approaches to control diseases, substituting those based on chemical inputs. While characterizing the P. viticola effector repertoire, we identified predicted secreted proteins that harbour EER and WY-domains but lack any RXLR or RXLR-like motifs. In absence of an efficient expression system in grapevine, we studied their function predominantly in the well-established transient expression system N. benthamiana. We found that Pv33 induces cell death in grapevine and Nicotiana species in a nuclear localisation dependent manner.
Results
Identification of candidate effectors lacking an RXLR motif
We searched the P. viticola proteome for effectors using two strategies: RXLR sequence motif search using string- and HMM-based methods, and low-stringency BLAST-based sequence similarity search against a database of known oomycete RXLR effectors (S2 Dataset). After filtering, we identified a total of 257 primary candidate effector proteins. Of these, 77 effector proteins display structural similarity to known RXLR effectors as determined by Phyre2 (Fig 1A).
Visual inspection of the protein sequences showed that 68 candidates with sequence and structural similarity to RXLR effectors possessed a dEER motif within the first 70 aminoacids, but were lacking a recognisable RXLR motif upstream (Fig 1B and S1 Dataset). Many structurally resolved oomycete effectors carry WY domains and 66 P. viticola candidates were also predicted to contain at least one WY domain. The numbers of WY domains present in P. viticola candidates varied between 1 and 10, the most common being 3 detected repeats (22 candidates). We will refer hereafter to these proteins as WY-domain proteins.
To validate the presence of WY-domain proteins from our isolate Pv221 in other P. viticola isolates we performed BLAST searches against the proteomes of isolates PvitFEM01 [20] and JL-7-2 [22]. The 66 Pv221 WY-domain proteins had significant sequence similarity to 63 and 51 proteins respectively from isolates JL-7-2 and PvitFEM01. With a sequence similarity of greater than 90% we found 52 proteins in JL-7-2, 40 of which having full length matches. In PvitFEM1, 40 matches, with 23 matching full-length sequences.
Using the 66 WY-domain proteins as a query in a low-stringency BLAST against the proteomes of Phytophthora infestans, P. parasitica, Peronospora tabacina, Plasmopara halstedii and Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis, we identified candidate secreted proteins containing WY-domain and EER motif but lacking RXLR motifs in all species analyzed (S1 Table and S1 Fig). All proteins, with the exception of 2 from P. halstedii, showed high confidence structural similarity to RXLR effectors as determined by Phyre2.
Sequence relationship and expression of P. viticola WY-domain proteins
To classify the P. viticola WY-domain effector candidates further, we constructed a phylogenetic tree which revealed three clades with branch support values higher than 0.6. Each clade contained clusters of sequences belonging to at least two scaffolds, and no sequences from the same scaffold were found in different clades (Fig 2).
We then studied the expression of the WY-domain genes upon infection and in germinated spores. For studying expression upon infection, we used the Illumina RNA-Seq data described in [29], at 48 and 72 hours post-infection. Analysis of expression in germinated spores was performed using the transcriptome described in [24], obtained with Roche 454 GS-FLX Titanium. Most genes were expressed in at least one condition (Fig 2). Most genes from Clade I were expressed to some extent in germinated spores, whilst the majority of genes from Clades II and III were not expressed or weakly expressed at this point. Expression in infected tissues could be detected for 60 out of the 68 genes. Detailed expression data is shown in S3 Dataset.
A WY-domain effector candidate triggers cell-death in grapevine leaves
To study the function of WY-domain proteins we selected and cloned four WY-domain proteins showing high expression level either in germinated spores or upon infection, Pv18 (S0028g11635; 3 WY-domain repeats), Pv31 (S0259g32900; 2 WY-domain repeats), Pv33 (S0046g15019; 1 WY-domain repeat), Pv82 (s0028g11682; 3 WY-domain repeats) without their secretion peptide, which we named Pv18Δsp, Pv31Δsp, Pv33Δsp and Pv82Δsp. To observe their effect in grapevine, the P. viticola host plant, we transiently expressed the above-described effectors in leaf discs of V. vinifera cv. Syrah. The efficiency of transformation was low, but macroscopic cell death was visible in 2 out of 4 leaf discs infiltrated with Agrobacterium containing Pv33Δsp (Fig 3A). Cell death was not observed in any of the leaf discs infiltrated with the other 3 effector candidates or with Pv33FL, a full-length version of Pv33 including its signal peptide. Concomitantly, we detected induction of the expression of the cell death marker VvHSR1 [30–32] in leaf discs transiently expressing Pv33Δsp, which could not be detected in leaf discs transiently expressing the other constructs (Fig 3B). The results obtained with Pv33Δsp were confirmed by transiently expressing the effector in whole leaves using a needleless syringe (S2 Fig). Together, these results show that the WY-domain protein Pv33Δsp induces cell death in grapevine leaves.
Pv33 is present in several European isolates, expressed during grape infection
We next investigated if Pv33 was broadly distributed in P. viticola populations. To do so, we performed PCRs with primers spanning from ATG to STOP on a set of isolates from different geographic origins. We obtained PCR products from all 7 European isolates tested, but not from isolates from North America (S2 Table). Sequencing of the PCR products revealed low amino acid sequence variability (S3 Fig). These results show that Pv33 is present in European populations.
To understand where in the P. viticola infection cycle would Pv33 be playing a role, we used semi-quantitative RT-PCR to validate the expression of Pv33 in different stages of P. viticola development in grapevine including sporangia, germinated spores, and infected grapevine tissues at different time-points after inoculation. Pv33 expression could be observed in sporangia (Sp) germinated spores (Sg) and infected tissues at 72 hours post-infection (hpi) (Fig 4). Expression levels were highest in germinated spores, suggesting a role early in infection.
Pv33Δsp induces cell death in different Nicotiana species
Due to the limitations of the grapevine transient expression system to perform further studies with Pv33, we verified if Pv33Δsp would also induce cell death in Nicotiana species. Pv33Δsp was able to induce cell death in Nicotiana benthamiana, N. occidentalis and N. tabacum (Fig 5A) following Agrobacterium-mediated transient expression. Pv33FL did not induce cell death in N. benthamiana and N. occidentalis and only a few necrotic spots in N. tabacum (Fig 5B), confirming the results obtained with grapevine and suggesting that cytoplasmic expression is needed for the Pv33 cell death activity.
In parallel, to study the possible role of WY-domain proteins as suppressors of plant defences we studied their ability to suppress the INF1-induced cell death upon Agrobacterium-mediated transient expression in Nicotiana benthamiana [33]. None of the proteins was able to suppress the INF1-mediated cell death (S4 Fig).
We next investigated the function of the signal peptide of Pv33 by fusing it to GFP and expressing it in leaves of N. benthamiana. Native GFP and GFP fused to the signal peptide of PR1 were used as negative and positive controls respectively. The fluorescence observed after transient expression of Pv33SP:GFP showed a pattern different to that observed with PR1SP:GFP, with weaker intensity and residual nucleoplasmic fluorescence (Fig 5D). Following BFA treatment, which blocks vesicular traffic, typical BFA bodies could be observed with both PR1SP:GFP and Pv33SP:GFP, with nuclear fluorescence still visible for Pv33SP:GFP (Fig 5E). The nuclear fluorescence observed with Pv33SP:GFP shows that part of the protein is not incorporated in the secretory pathway, suggesting that the signal peptide of Pv33 is only partially functional in plant cells, potentially explaining the retained cell death inducing activity of Pv33FL in N. tabacum.
Pv33Δsp-mediated HR is SGT1-dependent and EDS1-independent
In order to shed light in the nature of the Pv33Δsp-induced cell death, we used Virus-Induced Gene Silencing (VIGS) to study the role of SGT1 and EDS1 in this response. EDS1 is required for the HR mediated by the TIR-NBS-LRR immune receptors [34,35], whilst SGT1 is required for the cell death mediated by different plant-pathogen interactions [36]. SGT1 silencing resulted in mild developmental symptoms (S5 Fig). Transient expression of Pv33Δsp on N. benthamiana silenced for EDS1 and SGT1 resulted in the induction of cell death in EDS1-silenced plants and strong reduction of cell death in SGT1-silenced plants (Fig 6A). The silencing efficiency was monitored by quantitative RT-PCR (Fig 6B). These results indicate that the Pv33Δsp-triggered cell death requires SGT1 but it does not involve EDS1 and thus is likely not mediated by a TIR-NBS-LRR type disease resistance protein.
33Δsp localizes to the nucleus and the localization is required for HR induction
To study cellular localization, we obtained GFP translational fusions of Pv33Δsp and Pv33FL. Transient expression of Pv33Δsp-GFP in N. benthamiana resulted in the fluorescence signal localized to the nucleus, and the signal appeared enhanced in the nucleolus (Fig 7A). Leaves transiently expressing Pv33FL-GFP displayed an overall lower level of fluorescence (Fig 7B); nuclear fluorescence was reduced and fluorescent spots appeared in the periphery of the epidermal cells (Fig 7A). Similar results were obtained with Pv33ΔSP-GFP in V. vinifera (Fig 7C), where the general lower expression level hindered us to observe any fluorescence in leaf discs transiently expressing Pv33FL-GFP.
We next investigated if Pv33 contained a nuclear localisation signal (NLS). Search for NLS features using NLStradamus [37], NLS Mapper [38], NucPred [39], Psort [40], Predict NLS [41] and SeqNLS [42] didn’t predict any canonical NLS.
To further study the role of nuclear localization in the induction of cell death by Pv33Δsp, we obtained translational fusions of Pv33Δsp-GFP containing a Nuclear Export Signal (NES) and a mutated, inactive nuclear export signal (nes). Pv33Δsp-GFP-NES-induced cell death was strongly reduced when transiently expressed in N. benthamiana leaves and its fluorescence was limited to the peripheral spots, while Pv33Δsp-GFP-nes retained nuclear localization and the full cell death-inducing activity (Fig 8A and 8B). All constructs were expressed to similar levels (Fig 8C). These results indicate that Pv33Δsp-triggered death cell is dependent on its nuclear localization.
Discussion
In this study we described Plasmopara viticola secreted proteins possessing the WY-domain and EER motif characteristic of oomycete RXLR effectors but lacking the eponymous motif. We showed that one of these proteins, named Pv33, induces cell death in grapevine and Nicotiana species. Pv33-induced cell death in N. benthamiana is SGT1-dependent and requires nuclear localization. The fact that Pv33 induced cell death, together with the difficulty of genetic transformation in P. viticola, precluded us from validating its involvement in the virulence of the pathogen or its role in suppressing plant defences.
Phylogenetic analysis of P. viticola WY-domain-containing proteins grouped them in three clades. Comparing the phylogeny with the gene’s expression pattern revealed that most genes from Clade I were expressed in germinated spores, and the opposite was true for the other two clades (Fig 2). Also, high levels of expression in infected tissues were observed for members of clades II and III, but never for genes from clade I. These results suggest that clade I might include mostly genes expressed very early upon infection, whilst genes from clades II and III would be expressed mostly later in infection. Different temporal patterns of expression of effectors has been reported for oomycetes [43]. These observations suggest that a specific type of candidate effector sequence may be required at different stages of the pathogen life cycle.
Secreted WY-domain-containing proteins were found in the genome of three P. viticola isolates from different geographical origins, Pv221 (France, this study), PvitFEM01 (Italy, [20]) JL-7-2 (China, [22]). The differences in protein numbers in each isolate could reflect either the variability between isolates or the differences in completeness of the different genomic assemblies [20]. Similar proteins with EER motif and WY domain but lacking a recognisable RXLR motif were found in all investigated oomycete species genomes (S1 Fig and S1 Table) and had previously been reported from P. tabacina and P. halstedii [17–19]. Furthermore, the secretome of H. arabidopsidis contains 173 proteins that, similar to ATR5, carry an EER motif but lack the RXLR [16]. Our non-exhaustive search for WY-domain-containing proteins in other oomycetes retrieved some of the proteins previously described as such in the secretomes of P. tabacina and P. halstedii (S1 Fig). Notably, P. viticola sequences with high levels of sequence conservation among oomycetes often carried RXLR motifs in their Phytophthora homologs. Two examples, including Pv33, are listed in S6 Fig.
The RXLR-dEER motif has been shown to be required for translocation of RXLR effectors inside the plant cell [7]. Research in other oomycetes, particularly the downy mildews, resulted in the identification of several effectors that are translocated inside the plant cell and lack canonical RXLR motifs. In Pseudoperonospora cubensis, effectors carrying a QXLR motif were shown to localize to the plant nucleus and induce an HR in N. benthamiana [14]; effector proteins from Bremia lactucae carrying a GKLR motif are recognised inside lettuce plant cells in an R-gene specific manner [15]; ATR5 from Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis is recognised inside Arabidopsis cells by the NLR RPP5 even when it lacks an RXLR motif [16], although it possesses a GRVR sequence at the equivalent position, which remains of the above-described GKLR. All these examples commonly possess an EER motif, suggesting that its presence may in part alleviate the need for a RXLR motif for successful translocation. Examination of the Pv33 sequence, or an alignment of WY-domain proteins from the same clade, did not identify any conserved motif upstream of the EER similar to the above described (S7 Fig).
In some experiments the transient expression of Pv33 containing a signal peptide (Pv33FL) resulted in necrotic spots and mild induction of VvHSR. Interestingly, Pv33FL-GFP shows residual nuclear localisation, which could explain the eventual mild induction of cell death by Pv33FL. In this context, the amount of protein localising to the nucleus after transient expression of 33FL would be below the threshold necessary to activate cell death. The residual nuclear fluorescence observed with Pv33FL-GFP would most likely be the result of the signal peptide of Pv33 being inefficiently recognised by the plant secretion system (Fig 5D and 5E).
RNA-Seq data and RT-PCR experiments showed that Pv33 is expressed in sporangia, germinated spores and infected tissues at late infection, with the strongest expression being observed in germinated spores (Fig 4). Germinated spores present a germinative tube and may be considered as representative of the early stages of infection, with expression of effector genes taking place [25]. The expression pattern that we observe could thus fit with Pv33 being expressed at low level all through the P. viticola life cycle. Alternatively, Pv33 would be expressed only in spores and the expression observed at 72 hpi would be associated with the onset of sporulation. Although we cannot rule out this possibility, the RNA-Seq data showing expression of Pv33 at 48 hpi (too early for the start of sporulation), supported by an RT-PCR with higher number of cycles (S8 Fig), makes us favour the hypothesis of Pv33 being most relevant early upon infection.
Supporting an important role of Pv33 in the life cycle of P. viticola, we found the gene to be conserved in its amino acid sequence in all 7 tested European isolates making it a potential target for resistance breeding strategies. P. viticola was introduced into Europe from North America in the late 19th century. It is thus surprising that Pv33 is not present in any of the North American isolates (S2 Table). This could be explained if there was variability in the presence of Pv33 in the original North American populations. For example, Pv33 could be dispensable in North American populations due to functional redundancy with other effectors; a bottleneck effect of the introduction could thus make Pv33 important for the pathogen’s biology if the introduced isolate was missing other effectors with similar functions, or if it made it better adapted to the new host landscape.
Cell death induction by oomycete effectors has been reported previously. P. infestans RXLR effector PexRD2 has been reported as inducing SGT1-dependent cell death in N. benthamiana [44] and 10 Solanum species [45]; P. sojae Avh241 induces cell death in several plant species [46]; PpE4 from P. parasitica triggers cell death in Solanaceae [47]; PvRxLR16 from P. viticola induces cell death in N. benthamiana that is dependent on its nuclear localisation [28]. Conversely, oomycete CRN effectors were first identified as inducing necrosis when transiently expressed in plants [48]. They are localised to the plant nucleus and nuclear localisation is required for the induction of HR [5]. CRNs are considered as an ancestral class of oomycete effectors, since they are present in all lineages of oomycetes [5] and they can be found in species with different life styles, from necrotrophic [49] to biotrophic [24,50]. It has been hypothesized that the necrosis-inducing effect of CRNs will not reflect their real function in the infection process but it would rather be a “phenotypic manifestation reporting on effector activity” [51], an hypothesis that we favour for Pv33 based on our results.
Pv33 induces cell death both in members of the Solanaceae and the Vitaceae, which are phylogenetically distant. It seems less likely that the response is mediated by an R-gene mediated mechanisms conserved between both families. Accordingly, silencing of EDS1 did not affect the Pv33-induced cell death, suggesting that no TNL-type R gene is involved. Silencing of NLR-helper genes required for the function of diverse sensor R-genes of the CNL class [52] will help to clarify the eventual involvement of an NLR-type R gene in the cell death induced by Pv33. Independently of the underlying mechanism, the Pv33 induced cell death activity that we observe upon ectopic expression of the protein alone could be suppressed by another P. viticola effector in the context of an infection, avoiding a negative effect in pathogen development. A similar phenomenon has been reported for the biotrophic nematode Heterodera avenae, where the expression of cell death-inducing effectors upon infection does not have a negative effect on the pathogen’s life cycle [53].
In summary, here we identified and characterised Pv33, a signal peptide and WY-domain-containing protein from the oomycete P. viticola that is nuclear localized when expressed in plants and that induces cell death in plant cells. Xiang et al. [28] reported similar results with PvRxLR16, a canonical RXLR effector. Contrary to PvRxLR16, Pv33 lacks RXLR or other motifs described in oomycetes between the signal peptide and EER motifs and PvRxLR16-mediated cell death is N-glycosylation dependent, whilst our protein lacks any putative N-glycosylation sites. Future research will aim at solidifying the roles of Pv33 and other WY-domain-containing proteins inside plant cells during the infection of grape by P. viticola.
Materials and methods
Plant and pathogen materials
Vitis vinifera cv Syrah was grown on potting soil from green cuttings in a greenhouse at 22–19°C (day-night) and a photoperiod of 16/8h (light/ dark). Plants were propagated as cuttings every 3 months.
Nicotiana benthamiana was grown in greenhouse on soil at min 18°C- max. 28°C and a photoperiod 14h of light (10 klx min).
Plasmopara viticola isolate Pv221 was collected in Blanquefort (France) and maintained on detached leaves from V. vinifera cv Muscat Ottonel. Germinated spores and infected tissues were obtained as described in [25].
Sequence analysis
The proteome of P. viticola isolate Pv221 [21] was used to search for candidate RXLR effectors using the Galaxy workflow described in [54]. Genes identified as putative RXLRs by the method described in [55] and any of the two methods described in [7] were selected. At the same time, the proteome was used as a query in a BLAST search at low stringency (Evalue<10e-5) against a database of oomycete RXLR effectors. The BLAST output was analyzed with SignalP4 and TMHMM 2.0, and proteins lacking a signal peptide or possessing a transmembrane domain outside the first 70 amino acids were discarded. Finally, candidate effector genes were subjected to structural homology searches using Phyre2 (http://www.sbg.bio.ic.ac.uk/phyre2/html/page.cgi?id=index) with normal modeling mode [56]. Candidate genes displaying high confidence (100%) structural homology to proteins of known function and lacking RXLR and/or DEER motifs at the predicted positions were considered as false positives and discarded. WY-domain search was performed with the hmmsearch function of HMMER 3.1b2 using the HMM WY_motif.hmm and a cutoff of ≥ 0.
Alignment in Fig 1B was performed with MUSCLE, manually edited and displayed with BOXshade, with a cutoff of 50% of sequences identical for shading. The alignment shows 66 out of the 68 sequences, since removing 2 of them produced an alignment with less gaps and reduced amount of manual editing required.
Phylogenetic analyses were performed at www.phylogeny.fr [57]. Alignments were performed with Muscle with standard mode and default parameters. Following visual inspection of the alignment, 4 out of the 68 sequences were removed to improve the alignment and thus tree robustness. Curation with GBlocks could not be applied to the sequence set. Tree was constructed using PhyML with default settings and branch support was calculated using 100 bootstrap repetitions.
Expression data
Expression data in germinated spores was obtained with Roche 454 GS-FLX Titanium and is described in [24]. Germinated spore’s transcriptome data was obtained with strains PvSC and PvSL. To identify expressed genes from Pv221, candidate RXLR genes identified as described above were used as a query in a BLASTN against the transcriptome. Genes showing hits with both identity and subject cover higher than 90% were considered as expressed in germinated spores. The number of reads was counted for each gene and normalized by the gene mRNA size.
Expression data in infected tissues was obtained by RNA-Seq with three biological replicates per time point. RNA extraction and sequencing are described in [29]. RNA-Seq read pairs were mapped on the P. viticola 221 genome using the glint software with parameters set as follows: matches ≥50 nucleotides, ≤4 mismatches, no gap allowed, only best-scoring hits considered. Ambiguous matches (same best score) were removed. RNA-Seq stats and RSA accession numbers are provided in S3 Table.
Mapped reads were further analyzed under R environment (R Core Team 2018, https://www.R-project.org/) using the edgeR library [58] in order to calculate TMM-normalized Counts per Million mapped reads or cpm. These values were then normalized by the predicted mRNA size.
Plasmid constructs
P. viticola genomic DNA was extracted from infected leaves at the sporulation stage using the Qiagen DNeasy plant Mini kit with the following modifications: PVP30 was added to the AP1 buffer (25mg/mL) and elution was performed with buffer preheated at 65°C. The sequence of the P. viticola effectors was amplified from P. viticola genomic DNA using primers carrying overhangs with restriction enzymes. Amplifications were performed with Phusion polymerase (NEB). Amplified products were digested with the corresponding restriction enzymes (NEB) and cloned directionally into binary plasmid pBIN61 digested with the same enzymes.
To obtain GFP fusions, effectors were amplified as described above and cloned directionally into the pGFPS65T vector, which corresponds to pGFP [32] carrying the GFP S65T mutation.
Nuclear Exclusion Signal (NES) and mutated nuclear exclusion signal (nes), as defined in [59], were added by amplifying the GFPS65T sequence with primers including the signal sequences and appropriate restriction enzymes, and then replacing the GFP sequence in the pGFPS65T-33Δsp construct with the ones containing respectively the NES and nes sequences.
PR1sp:GFP was amplified from pTrafficLights [60]. Pv33sp:GFP was amplified from GFP using a forward primer containing the sequence of the Pv33 signal peptide. Constructs were cloned into a modified pUB-Dest vector derived from [61] containing a 1500 bp Arabidopsis ubiquitin 10 (AtUBQ10) promoter sequence for enhanced expression in N. benthamiana.
Identity of all clones was confirmed by sequencing. A list of constructs and primer sequences is presented in S4 Table.
Transient expression of genes by agroinfiltration
Agroinfiltration of N. benthamiana was performed as described in [62].
To agroinfiltrate V. vinifera leaves, bacterial suspensions were prepared as described in [63] and Silwet-L77 was added to the bacterial suspension at 0.3% final concentration. Infiltrations were performed on leaf discs derived from young leaves by immerging the discs for 10 minutes in the bacterial solution, as described in [64].
Virus-Induced Gene Silencing (VIGS)
For VIGS experiments, Nicotiana benthamiana was grown on Levington F2 at 24°C with 16 h photoperiod for two weeks prior to agroinfiltration. Two-week-old N. benthamiana plants were agroinfiltrated with a 1:1 mix of A. tumefaciens GV3101 cells carrying either TRV1 or a recombinant pYL279a for silencing of uidA (negative control), NbEDS1 or NbSGT1 and further grown in the same conditions for two more weeks. Then, newly formed leaves were infiltrated with A. tumefaciens GV3101 cells carrying either uidA, Pv33, Pv33Δsp. A 1:1 mix of A. tumefaciens GV3101 cells carrying AvrBs3 and Bs4 were infiltrated as a control. Symptoms were monitored five days after agroinfiltration.
Quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) analyses
Total RNA was extracted 10 days after VIGS agronfiltration from newly formed leaves using RNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen, USA). One microgram was reverse transcribed to generate first-strand cDNA, using the Roche Transcriptor First Strand cDNA Synthesis Kit according to the manufacturer’s instructions (Roche, Switzerland). Quality was assessed by electrophoresis on agarose gel. qRT-PCR experiments were performed with 2.5 μl of a 1:20 dilution of first-strand cDNA and LightCycler 480 SYBR Green I Master mix, according to the manufacturer’s instructions (Roche, Switzerland). Gene-specific oligonucleotides were designed with BatchPrimer3 software (http://probes.pw.usda.gov/batchprimer3/) outside of the sequence used for VIGS silencing and their specificity was validated by analyzing dissociation curves after each run. Genes encoding L23 (Niben101Scf01444g02009) and FBOX (Niben101Scf04495g02005) were selected as constitutive internal controls for N. benthamiana genes [65]. Six biological replicates of the entire experiment were performed. Gene expression was normalized with respect to constitutively expressed internal controls, quantified and plotted using R software.
Semi-quantitative RT-PCR
RNA extraction, cDNA synthesis and PCR were performed as described in [62]. Primer sequences are shown in S4 Table.
Immuno-blot
Infiltrated N. benthamiana leaves were sampled at 48 hpa. 100 mg (fresh weight) of plant tissue were ground in 200 uL of Laemmli buffer, boiled and centrifuged 5min at 13 000 rpm. 75 µl of the supernatant were separated on a 12% polyacrylamide gel and transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane by wet transfer. The membrane was blocked for 30 min with buffer (PBS 1X, Tween 1% and 5% skimmed milk), then incubated with 1/30 000 anti-GFP overnight. Next day, the membrane was washed 3 times 10 min with buffer (PBS 1X, Tween 0.5%) and incubated 4 hours with 1/25000 anti-GAR-PO antibodies (Goat Anti-rabbit Peroxidase). Proteins were detected with ECL using a G:Box (Syngene) imaging system. Finally, the membrane was stained with Ponceau red.
BFA assays
A suspension of A. tumefaciens cells at OD600 of 0.2 carrying a construct for constitutive expression of either GFP, PR1sp:GFP or Pv33sp:GFP was infiltrated on the abaxial side of N. benthamiana leaves using a syringe without a needle. Twenty-four hours after agroinfiltration, a solution of 10 µM BFA in agroinfiltration medium (10 mM MgCl2, 10 mM MES pH 7.5) was infiltrated on the same spots. Samples were collected and used for confocal imaging after 4 hours.
Imaging
White light images from V. vinifera and N. benthamiana leaves were taken at 6 dpa using a Nikon D5000.
Blue light images from N. benthamiana leaves were taken with a G:Box (Syngene) imaging system with blue LED at 465 nm; except for Fig 8A which was taken with white and blue LED at 465 nm.
Epifluorescence microscopy of V. vinifera leaves was performed with a Zeiss Axio Imager M2 microscope. Images were taken under Green fluorescent protein (GFP) excitations at 470 nm.
Confocal microscopy images were obtained with a LSM700 confocal laser microscope (Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany), using a 20X water-immersion objective lens. GFP fluorescence was observed after excitation at 488 nm, with a 527 short-pass emission filter.
Supporting information
Acknowledgments
We are indebted to Sylvaine Boissinot for assistance and reagents for Immuno blotting, Jérôme Mutterer at IBMP Strasbourg for assistance with confocal microscopy, Mélanie Rouxel and François Delmotte at UMR SAVE Bordeaux for their contribution to the amplification of Pv33 in different isolates, and Yann Dussert for assistance with secretome and WY-domain analysis. We thank Sophien Kamoun for INF1 and Avr3A clones. We thank the SEAV at INRA-Colmar for technical support in the production of plants.
Data Availability
RNA-Seq data have been deposited in the Sequence Read Archive (SRA) under study accession number SRP079325 (SRR7500369 to SRR7500377). P. viticola Pv221 genome annotation is available at https://doi.org/10.15454/NQEX46. All other relevant data are within the manuscript and its Supporting Information files.
Funding Statement
Research was funded by Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) grant EFFECTOORES (ANR-13-ADAP-0003) PM.(https://anr.fr/). MC was funded by a joint fellowship from INRA BAP Department (http://www.bap.inra.fr/) and Region Alsace (https://www.grandest.fr/). EE and SS are funded by the Gatsby Charitable Foundation (https://www.gatsby.org.uk/). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
RNA-Seq data have been deposited in the Sequence Read Archive (SRA) under study accession number SRP079325 (SRR7500369 to SRR7500377). P. viticola Pv221 genome annotation is available at https://doi.org/10.15454/NQEX46. All other relevant data are within the manuscript and its Supporting Information files.