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Creators/Authors contains: "Rocha-Loyola, Perla"

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  1. The plant pathogenic bacteriumPseudomonas syringaepv tomato DC3000 (PstDC3000) causes disease in tomato, in the model plantArabidopsis thaliana,and conditionally inNicotiana benthamiana.The pathogenicity ofPstDC3000 is mostly due to bacterial virulence proteins, known as effectors, that are translocated into the plant cytoplasm through the type III secretion system (T3SS). Bacterial type III secreted effectors (T3SEs) target plants physiological processes and suppress defense responses to enable and support bacterial proliferation. ThePstDC3000 T3SE HopD1 interferes with plant defense responses by targeting the transcription factor NTL9. This work shows that HopD1 also targets the immune protein AtNHR2B (Arabidopsis thaliananonhost resistance 2B), a protein that localizes to dynamic vesicles of the plant endomembrane system. Live-cell imaging ofNicotiana benthamianaplants transiently co-expressingHopD1fused to the epitope haemagglutinin (HopD1-HA) withAtNHR2Bfused to the red fluorescent protein (AtNHR2B-RFP), revealed that HopD1-HA interferes with the abundance and cellular dynamics of AtNHR2B-RFP-containing vesicles. The results from this study shed light into an additional function of HopD1 while contributing to understanding how T3SEs also target vesicle trafficking-mediated processes in plants. 
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  2. Abstract The plant pathogenic bacterium Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato DC3000 ( Pst DC3000) has become a paradigm to investigate plant-bacteria interactions due to its ability to cause disease in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Pst DC3000 uses the type III secretion system to deliver type III secreted effectors (T3SEs) directly into the plant cytoplasm. Pst DC3000 T3SEs contribute to pathogenicity by suppressing plant defense responses and targeting plant’s physiological processes. Although the complete repertoire of effectors encoded in the Pst DC3000 genome have been identified, the specific function for most of them remains to be elucidated. Among those effectors, the mitochondrial-localized T3E HopG1, suppresses plant defense responses and promotes the development of disease symptoms. Here, we show that HopG1 triggers necrotic cell death that enables the growth of adapted and non-adapted pathogens. We further showed that HopG1 interacts with the plant immunity-related protein AtNHR2B and that AtNHR2B attenuates HopG1- virulence functions. These results highlight the importance of HopG1 as a multi-faceted protein and uncover its interplay with AtNHR2B. 
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