An oomycete effector co-opts a host RabGAP protein to remodel pathogen interface and subvert defense-related secretion

Yuen, E. L. H.; Tumtas, Y.; Chan, L. I.; Ibrahim, T.; Evangelisti, E.; Tulin, F.; Sklenar, J.; Menke, F.; Kamoun, S.; Bubeck, D.; Schornack, S.; Bozkurt, T. O.
2024
bioRxiv
DOI
10.1101/2024.01.11.575225
Pathogens have evolved sophisticated mechanisms to manipulate host cell membrane dynamics, a crucial adaptation to survive in hostile environments shaped by innate immune responses. Plant-derived membrane interfaces, engulfing invasive hyphal projections of fungal and oomycete pathogens, are prominent junctures dictating infection outcomes. Understanding how pathogens transform these host-pathogen interfaces to their advantage remains a key biological question. Here, we identified a conserved effector, secreted by plant pathogenic oomycetes, that co-opts a host Rab GTPase-activating protein (RabGAP), TBC1D15L, to remodel the host-pathogen interface. The effector, PiE354, hijacks TBC1D15L as a susceptibility factor to usurp its GAP activity on Rab8a - a key Rab GTPase crucial for defense-related secretion. By hijacking TBC1D15L, PiE354 purges Rab8a from the plasma membrane, diverting Rab8a-mediated immune trafficking away from the pathogen interface. This mechanism signifies an uncanny evolutionary adaptation of a pathogen effector in co-opting a host regulatory component to subvert defense-related secretion, thereby providing unprecedented mechanistic insights into the reprogramming of host membrane dynamics by pathogens.