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While diverse microbe‐ or damage‐associated molecular patterns (MAMPs/DAMPs) typically trigger a common set of intracellular signalling events, comparative analysis between the MAMPs flg22 and elf18 revealed MAMP‐specific differences in Ca2+ signalling, defence gene expression and MAMP‐mediated growth arrest in Arabidopsis thaliana. Such MAMP‐specific differences are, in part, controlled by BAK1, a kinase associated with several receptors. Whereas defence gene expression and growth inhibition mediated by flg22 were reduced in bak1 mutants, BAK1 had no or minor effects on the same responses elicited by elf18. As the residual Ca2+ elevations induced by diverse MAMPs/DAMPs (flg22, elf18 and Pep1) were virtually identical in bak1 mutants, a differential BAK1‐mediated signal amplification to attain MAMP/DAMP‐specific Ca2+ amplitudes in wild‐type plants may be hypothesized. Furthermore, abrogation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation, either in the rbohD mutant or through inhibitor application, led to loss of a second Ca2+ peak, demonstrating a feedback effect of ROS on Ca2+ signalling. Conversely, mpk3 mutants showed a prolonged accumulation of ROS but this did not significantly impinge on the overall Ca2+ response. Thus, fine‐tuning of MAMP/DAMP responses involves interplay between diverse signalling elements functioning both up‐ or downstream of Ca2+ signalling.
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Harpin HrpZ is one of the most abundant proteins secreted through the pathogenesis‐associated type III secretion system of the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae. HrpZ shows membrane‐binding and pore‐forming activities in vitro, suggesting that it could be targeted to the host cell plasma membrane. We studied the native molecular forms of HrpZ and found that it forms dimers and higher order oligomers. Lipid binding by HrpZ was tested with 15 different membrane lipids, with HrpZ interacting only with phosphatidic acid. Pore formation by HrpZ in artificial lipid vesicles was found to be dependent on the presence of phosphatidic acid. In addition, HrpZ was able to form pores in vesicles prepared from Arabidopsis thaliana plasma membrane, providing evidence for the suggested target of HrpZ in the host. To map the functions associated with HrpZ, we constructed a comprehensive series of deletions in the hrpZ gene derived from P. syringae pv. phaseolicola, and studied the mutant proteins. We found that oligomerization is mainly mediated by a region near the C‐terminus of the protein, and that the same region is also essential for membrane pore formation. Phosphatidic acid binding seems to be mediated by two regions separate in the primary structure. Tobacco, a nonhost plant, recognizes, as a defence elicitor, a 24‐amino‐acid HrpZ fragment which resides in the region indispensable for the oligomerization and pore formation functions of HrpZ.
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