Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Lusisizwe Kwezi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Lusisizwe Kwezi.


PLOS ONE | 2010

The Arabidopsis Wall Associated Kinase-Like 10 Gene Encodes a Functional Guanylyl Cyclase and Is Co-Expressed with Pathogen Defense Related Genes

Stuart Meier; Oziniel Ruzvidzo; Monique Morse; Lara Donaldson; Lusisizwe Kwezi; Chris Gehring

Background Second messengers have a key role in linking environmental stimuli to physiological responses. One such messenger, guanosine 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP), has long been known to be an essential signaling molecule in many different physiological processes in higher plants, including biotic stress responses. To date, however, the guanylyl cyclase (GC) enzymes that catalyze the formation of cGMP from GTP have largely remained elusive in higher plants. Principal Findings We have identified an Arabidopsis receptor type wall associated kinase–like molecule (AtWAKL10) as a candidate GC and provide experimental evidence to show that the intracellular domain of AtWAKL10431–700 can generate cGMP in vitro. Further, we also demonstrate that the molecule has kinase activity indicating that AtWAKL10 is a twin-domain catalytic protein. A co-expression and stimulus-specific expression analysis revealed that AtWAKL10 is consistently co-expressed with well characterized pathogen defense related genes and along with these genes is induced early and sharply in response to a range of pathogens and their elicitors. Conclusions We demonstrate that AtWAKL10 is a twin-domain, kinase-GC signaling molecule that may function in biotic stress responses that are critically dependent on the second messenger cGMP.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

The Phytosulfokine (PSK) Receptor Is Capable of Guanylate Cyclase Activity and Enabling Cyclic GMP-dependent Signaling in Plants

Lusisizwe Kwezi; Oziniel Ruzvidzo; Janet I. Wheeler; Kershini Govender; Sylvana Iacuone; Philip E. Thompson; Chris Gehring; Helen R. Irving

Phytosulfokines (PSKs) are sulfated pentapeptides that stimulate plant growth and differentiation mediated by the PSK receptor (PSKR1), which is a leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinase. We identified a putative guanylate cyclase (GC) catalytic center in PSKR1 that is embedded within the kinase domain and hypothesized that the GC works in conjunction with the kinase in downstream PSK signaling. We expressed the recombinant complete kinase (cytoplasmic) domain of AtPSKR1 and show that it has serine/threonine kinase activity using the Ser/Thr peptide 1 as a substrate with an approximate Km of 7.5 μm and Vmax of 1800 nmol min−1 mg−1 of protein. This same recombinant protein also has GC activity in vitro that is dependent on the presence of either Mg2+ or Mn2+. Overexpression of the full-length AtPSKR1 receptor in Arabidopsis leaf protoplasts raised the endogenous basal cGMP levels over 20-fold, indicating that the receptor has GC activity in vivo. In addition, PSK-α itself, but not the non-sulfated backbone, induces rapid increases in cGMP levels in protoplasts. Together these results indicate that the PSKR1 contains dual GC and kinase catalytic activities that operate in vivo and that this receptor constitutes a novel class of enzymes with overlapping catalytic domains.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2007

Plant nucleotide cyclases: an increasingly complex and growing family.

Stuart Meier; Cathal Seoighe; Lusisizwe Kwezi; Helen R. Irving; Chris Gehring

Second messengers have a key role in linking environmental stimuli to physiological responses. One such messenger, cGMP, has long been known to be critical to many different processes in higher plants while guanylyl cyclases (GCs), enzymes that catalyse the formation of cGMP from GTP have largely remained elusive. This is somewhat surprising considering that the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii contains > 90 annotated GCs. We have recently shown (PLoS ONE 2(5): e449) that a recombinant cytoplasmic domain of the Arabidopsis brassinosteroid receptor AtBRI has GC activity in vitro. This finding may suggest that other leucine-rich receptor kinases such as the phystosulfokine receptor may also confer GC activity as it has a high degree of similarity in the domain that has been delineated as essential for catalysis. In addition, the discovery of increasing complexities in the molecular architecture of higher plant nucleotide cyclases (NCs) is entirely compatible with findings in Chlamydomonas where such domains appear in > 20 different combinations suggesting a role in highly diverse and complex signaling events.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2012

Moonlighting kinases with guanylate cyclase activity can tune regulatory signal networks.

Helen R. Irving; Lusisizwe Kwezi; Janet I. Wheeler; Christoph A. Gehring

Guanylate cyclase (GC) catalyzes the formation of cGMP and it is only recently that such enzymes have been characterized in plants. One family of plant GCs contains the GC catalytic center encapsulated within the intracellular kinase domain of leucine rich repeat receptor like kinases such as the phytosulfokine and brassinosteroid receptors. In vitro studies show that both the kinase and GC domain have catalytic activity indicating that these kinase-GCs are examples of moonlighting proteins with dual catalytic function. The natural ligands for both receptors increase intracellular cGMP levels in isolated mesophyll protoplast assays suggesting that the GC activity is functionally relevant. cGMP production may have an autoregulatory role on receptor kinase activity and/or contribute to downstream cell expansion responses. We postulate that the receptors are members of a novel class of receptor kinases that contain functional moonlighting GC domains essential for complex signaling roles.


Plant Journal | 2017

The brassinosteroid receptor BRI1 can generate cGMP enabling cGMP-dependent downstream signaling

Janet I. Wheeler; Aloysius Wong; Claudius Marondedze; Arnoud J. Groen; Lusisizwe Kwezi; Lubna Freihat; Jignesh Vyas; Misjudeen Raji; Helen R. Irving; Chris Gehring

The brassinosteroid receptor brassinosteroid insensitive 1 (BRI1) is a member of the leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinase family. The intracellular kinase domain of BRI1 is an active kinase and also encapsulates a guanylate cyclase catalytic centre. Using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry, we confirmed that the recombinant cytoplasmic domain of BRI1 generates pmol amounts of cGMP per μg protein with a preference for magnesium over manganese as a co-factor. Importantly, a functional BRI1 kinase is essential for optimal cGMP generation. Therefore, the guanylate cyclase activity of BRI1 is modulated by the kinase while cGMP, the product of the guanylate cyclase, in turn inhibits BRI1 kinase activity. Furthermore, we show using Arabidopsis root cell cultures that cGMP rapidly potentiates phosphorylation of the downstream substrate brassinosteroid signaling kinase 1 (BSK1). Taken together, our results suggest that cGMP acts as a modulator that enhances downstream signaling while dampening signal generation from the receptor.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Reply to Ashton: The putative guanylyl cyclase domain of AtPepR1 and similar plant receptors

Gerald A. Berkowitz; Chris Gehring; Helen R. Irving; Lusisizwe Kwezi

We recently showed (1) that peptide ligand binding to a plant leucine-rich-repeat receptor-like kinase (LRR-RLK) (AtPepR1) initiates pathogen defense signaling cascades through elevation of cytosolic Ca2+. We provided indirect evidence consistent with AtPepR1 signaling through cytosolic guanylyl cyclase (GC) activity as follows. Receptor signaling required a cyclic nucleotide activated Ca2+ channel. Exogenous lipophilic cGMP activated channel-dependent Ca2+ elevation. Expression of the putative GC domain of the AtPepR1 receptor (“AtPepR1-GC”) in Escherichia coli increased cell cGMP levels. Affinity-purified AtPepR1-GC had a level of GC activity in vitro equal to that of other plant proteins with a similar putative GC domain (2).


Biochemical Journal | 2016

Phosphorylation of the dimeric cytoplasmic domain of the phytosulfokine receptor, PSKR1

Victor Muleya; Claudius Marondedze; Janet I. Wheeler; Ludivine Thomas; Yee Fong Mok; Michael D. W. Griffin; David T. Manallack; Lusisizwe Kwezi; Kathryn S. Lilley; Christoph A. Gehring; Helen R. Irving

Phytosulfokines (PSKs) are plant peptide hormones that co-regulate plant growth, differentiation and defense responses. PSKs signal through a plasma membrane localized leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinase (phytosulfokine receptor 1, PSKR1) that also contains a functional cytosolic guanylate cyclase with its cyclase catalytic center embedded within the kinase domain. To functionally characterize this novel type of overlapping dual catalytic function, we investigated the phosphorylation of PSKR1 in vitro Tandem mass spectrometry of the cytoplasmic domain of PSKR1 (PSKR1cd) revealed at least 11 phosphorylation sites (8 serines, 2 threonines and 1 tyrosine) within the PSKR1cd. Phosphomimetic mutations of three serine residues (Ser686, Ser696 and Ser698) in tandem at the juxta-membrane position resulted in enhanced kinase activity in the on-mutant that was suppressed in the off-mutant, but both mutations reduced guanylate cyclase activity. Both the on and off phosphomimetic mutations of the phosphotyrosine (Tyr888) residue in the activation loop suppressed kinase activity, while neither mutation affected guanylate cyclase activity. Size exclusion and analytical ultracentrifugation analysis of the PSKR1cd suggest that it is reversibly dimeric in solution, which was further confirmed by biflourescence complementation. Taken together, these data suggest that in this novel type of receptor domain architecture, specific phosphorylation and dimerization are possibly essential mechanisms for ligand-mediated catalysis and signaling.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2018

Intramolecular crosstalk between catalytic activities of receptor kinases

Lusisizwe Kwezi; Janet I. Wheeler; Claudius Marondedze; Chris Gehring; Helen R. Irving

ABSTRACT Signal modulation is important for the growth and development of plants and this process is mediated by a number of factors including physiological growth regulators and their associated signal transduction pathways. Protein kinases play a central role in signaling, including those involving pathogen response mechanisms. We previously demonstrated an active guanylate cyclase (GC) catalytic center in the brassinosteroid insensitive receptor (AtBRI1) within an active intracellular kinase domain resulting in dual enzymatic activity. Here we propose a novel type of receptor architecture that is characterized by a functional GC catalytic center nested in the cytosolic kinase domain enabling intramolecular crosstalk. This may be through a cGMP-AtBRI1 complex forming that may induce a negative feedback mechanism leading to desensitisation of the receptor, regulated through the cGMP production pathway. We further argue that the comparatively low but highly localized cGMP generated by the GC in response to a ligand is sufficient to modulate the kinase activity. This type of receptor therefore provides a molecular switch that directly and/or indirectly affects ligand dependent phosphorylation of downstream signaling cascades and suggests that subsequent signal transduction and modulation works in conjunction with the kinase in downstream signaling.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

Recombinant Expression and Functional Testing of Candidate Adenylate Cyclase Domains

Oziniel Ruzvidzo; Bridget Tshegofatso Dikobe; David Tonderai Kawadza; Grace H. Mabadahanye; Patience Chatukuta; Lusisizwe Kwezi


Archive | 2013

Calcium is the molecular switch shifting the phytosulfokine receptor 1 (PSKR1) from kinase to guanylate cyclase activity

Victor Muleya; Janet I. Wheeler; Lubna Freihat; Ludivine Thomas; Claudius Marondedze; David T. Manallack; Oziniel Ruzvidzo; Lusisizwe Kwezi; Christoph A. Gehring; Helen R. Irving

Collaboration


Dive into the Lusisizwe Kwezi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Oziniel Ruzvidzo

University of the Western Cape

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Claudius Marondedze

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chris Gehring

University of the Western Cape

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christoph A. Gehring

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stuart Meier

University of the Western Cape

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chris Gehring

University of the Western Cape

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge