Coiled-coil domain-dependent homodimerization of intracellular barley immune receptors defines a minimal functional module for triggering cell death

Authors
  • T. Maekawa
  • W. Cheng
  • L.N. Spiridon
  • A. Töller
  • E. Lukasik
  • Y. Saijo
  • P. Liu
  • Q.H. Shen
  • M.A. Micluta
  • I.E. Somssich
  • F.L.W. Takken ORCID logo
  • A.J. Petrescu
  • J. Chai
  • P. Schulze-Lefert
Publication date 2011
Journal CELL Host & Microbe
Volume | Issue number 9 | 3
Pages (from-to) 187-199
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS)
Abstract
Plants and animals have evolved structurally related innate immune sensors, designated NLRs, to detect intracellular nonself molecules. NLRs are modular, consisting of N-terminal coiled-coil (CC) or TOLL/interleukin-1 receptor (TIR) domains, a central nucleotide-binding (NB) domain, and C-terminal leucine-rich repeats (LRRs). The polymorphic barley mildew A (MLA) locus encodes CC-containing allelic immune receptors recognizing effectors of the pathogenic powdery mildew fungus. We report the crystal structure of an MLA receptor's invariant CC domain, which reveals a rod-shaped homodimer. MLA receptors also self-associate in vivo, but self-association appears to be independent of effector-triggered receptor activation. MLA CC mutants that fail to self-interact impair in planta cell death activity triggered by the CC domain alone and by an autoactive full-length MLA receptor that mimics its ATP-bound state. Thus, CC domain-dependent dimerization of the immune sensor defines a minimal functional unit and implies a role for the dimeric CC module in downstream immune signaling.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chom.2011.02.008
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