Sean Chapman
James Hutton Institute
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Featured researches published by Sean Chapman.
Nature | 2007
Stephen C. Whisson; Petra C. Boevink; Lucy N. Moleleki; Anna O. Avrova; Juan Morales; Eleanor M. Gilroy; Miles R. Armstrong; Severine Grouffaud; Pieter van West; Sean Chapman; Ingo Hein; Ian K. Toth; Leighton Pritchard; Paul R. J. Birch
Bacterial, oomycete and fungal plant pathogens establish disease by translocation of effector proteins into host cells, where they may directly manipulate host innate immunity. In bacteria, translocation is through the type III secretion system, but analogous processes for effector delivery are uncharacterized in fungi and oomycetes. Here we report functional analyses of two motifs, RXLR and EER, present in translocated oomycete effectors. We use the Phytophthora infestans RXLR-EER-containing protein Avr3a as a reporter for translocation because it triggers RXLR-EER-independent hypersensitive cell death following recognition within plant cells that contain the R3a resistance protein. We show that Avr3a, with or without RXLR-EER motifs, is secreted from P. infestans biotrophic structures called haustoria, demonstrating that these motifs are not required for targeting to haustoria or for secretion. However, following replacement of Avr3a RXLR-EER motifs with alanine residues, singly or in combination, or with residues KMIK-DDK—representing a change that conserves physicochemical properties of the protein—P. infestans fails to deliver Avr3a or an Avr3a–GUS fusion protein into plant cells, demonstrating that these motifs are required for translocation. We show that RXLR-EER-encoding genes are transcriptionally upregulated during infection. Bioinformatic analysis identifies 425 potential genes encoding secreted RXLR-EER class proteins in the P. infestans genome. Identification of this class of proteins provides unparalleled opportunities to determine how oomycetes manipulate hosts to establish infection.
The Plant Cell | 1998
Simon Santa Cruz; Alison G. Roberts; Denton A. M. Prior; Sean Chapman; Karl J. Oparka
Movement-deficient potato virus X (PVX) mutants tagged with the green fluorescent protein were used to investigate the role of the coat protein (CP) and triple gene block (TGB) proteins in virus movement. Mutants lacking either a functional CP or TGB were restricted to single epidermal cells. Microinjection of dextran probes into cells infected with the mutants showed that an increase in the plasmodesmal size exclusion limit was dependent on one or more of the TGB proteins and was independent of CP. Fluorescently labeled CP that was injected into epidermal cells was confined to the injected cells, showing that the CP lacks an intrinsic transport function. In additional experiments, transgenic plants expressing the PVX CP were used as rootstocks and grafted with nontransformed scions. Inoculation of the PVX CP mutants to the transgenic rootstocks resulted in cell-to-cell and systemic movement within the transgenic tissue. Translocation of the CP mutants into sink leaves of the nontransgenic scions was also observed, but infection was restricted to cells close to major veins. These results indicate that the PVX CP is transported through the phloem, unloads into the vascular tissue, and subsequently is transported between cells during the course of infection. Evidence is presented that PVX uses a novel strategy for cell-to-cell movement involving the transport of filamentous virions through plasmodesmata.
The Plant Cell | 2003
Nieves Medina Escobar; Sophie Haupt; Graham Thow; Petra C. Boevink; Sean Chapman; Karl J. Oparka
A strategy was developed for the high-throughput localization of unknown expressed proteins in Nicotiana benthamiana. Libraries of random, partial cDNAs fused to the 5′ or 3′ end of the gene for green fluorescent protein (GFP) were expressed in planta using a vector based on Tobacco mosaic virus. Viral populations were screened en masse on inoculated leaves using a confocal microscope fitted with water-dipping lenses. Each viral infection site expressed a unique cDNA-GFP fusion, allowing several hundred cDNA-GFP fusions to be screened in a single day. More than half of the members of the library carrying cDNA fusions to the 5′ end of gfp that expressed fluorescent fusion proteins displayed discrete, noncytosolic, subcellular localizations. Nucleotide sequence determination of recovered cDNA sequences and subsequent sequence searches showed that fusions of GFP to proteins that had a predicted subcellular “address” became localized with high fidelity. In a subsequent screen of >20,000 infection foci, 12 fusion proteins were identified that localized to plasmodesmata, a subcellular structure for which very few protein components have been identified. This virus-based system represents a method for high-throughput functional genomic study of plant cell organelles and allows the identification of unique proteins that associate with specific subcompartments within organelles.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Sean Chapman; Christine Faulkner; Eirini Kaiserli; Carlos García-Mata; Eugene I. Savenkov; Alison G. Roberts; Karl J. Oparka; John M. Christie
Fluorescent proteins (FPs) based on green fluorescent protein (GFP) are widely used throughout cell biology to study protein dynamics, and have extensive use as reporters of virus infection and spread. However, FP-tagging of viruses is limited by the constraints of viral genome size resulting in FP loss through recombination events. To overcome this, we have engineered a smaller (≈10 kDa) flavin-based alternative to GFP (≈25 kDa) derived from the light, oxygen or voltage-sensing (LOV) domain of the plant blue light receptor, phototropin. Molecular evolution and Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV)-based expression screening produced LOV variants with improved fluorescence and photostability in planta. One variant in particular, designated iLOV, possessed photophysical properties that made it ideally suited as a reporter of subcellular protein localization in both plant and mammalian cells. Moreover, iLOV fluorescence was found to recover spontaneously after photobleaching and displayed an intrinsic photochemistry conferring advantages over GFP-based FPs. When expressed either as a cytosolic protein or as a viral protein fusion, iLOV functioned as a superior reporter to GFP for monitoring local and systemic infections of plant RNA viruses. iLOV, therefore, offers greater utility in FP-tagging of viral gene products and represents a viable alternative where functional protein expression is limited by steric constraints or genome size.
The Plant Cell | 2002
Trudi Gillespie; Petra C. Boevink; Sophie Haupt; Alison G. Roberts; Rachel L. Toth; Tracy A. Valentine; Sean Chapman; Karl J. Oparka
Microtubules interact strongly with the viral movement protein (MP) of Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) and are thought to transport the viral genome between plant cells. We describe a functionally enhanced DNA-shuffled movement protein (MPR3) that remained bound to the vertices of the cortical endoplasmic reticulum, showing limited affinity for microtubules. A single amino acid change was shown to confer the MPR3 phenotype. Disruption of the microtubule cytoskeleton in situ with pharmacological agents, or by silencing of the α-tubulin gene, had no significant effect on the spread of TMV vectors expressing wild-type MP (MPWT) and did not prevent the accumulation of MPWT in plasmodesmata. Thus, cell-to-cell trafficking of TMV can occur independently of microtubules. The MPR3 phenotype was reproduced when infection sites expressing MPWT were treated with a specific proteasome inhibitor, indicating that the degradation of MPR3 is impaired. We suggest that the improved viral transport functions of MPR3 arise from evasion of a host degradation pathway.
Traffic | 2007
Kathryn M. Wright; Nicola T. Wood; Alison G. Roberts; Sean Chapman; Petra C. Boevink; Katrin MacKenzie; Karl J. Oparka
Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) was used to study the mechanism by which fluorescent‐protein‐tagged movement protein (MP) of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is targeted to plasmodesmata (PD). The data show that fluorescence recovery in PD at the leading edge of an infection requires elements of the cortical actin/endoplasmic reticulum (ER) network and can occur in the absence of an intact microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton. Inhibitors of the actin cytoskeleton (latrunculin and cytochalasin) significantly inhibited MP targeting, while MT inhibitors (colchicine and oryzalin) did not. Application of sodium azide to infected cells implicated an active component of MP transfer to PD. Treatment of cells with Brefeldin A (BFA) at a concentration that caused reabsorption of the Golgi bodies into the ER (precluding secretion of viral MP) had no effect on MP targeting, while disruption of the cortical ER with higher concentrations of BFA caused significant inhibition. Our results support a model of TMV MP function in which targeting of MP to PD during infection is mediated by the actin/ER network.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2013
Jens Tilsner; Olga Linnik; Marion Louveaux; Ian M. Roberts; Sean Chapman; Karl J. Oparka
Plant virus movement proteins compartmentalize replication complexes at plasmodesmata for localized RNA synthesis and directional trafficking of the virus between cells.
Molecular Plant Pathology | 2009
John T. Jones; Amar Kumar; Liliya A. Pylypenko; Amarnath Thirugnanasambandam; Lydia Castelli; Sean Chapman; Peter J. A. Cock; Eric Grenier; Catherine J. Lilley; Mark S. Phillips; Vivian C. Blok
In this article, we describe the analysis of over 9000 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) from cDNA libraries obtained from various life cycle stages of Globodera pallida. We have identified over 50 G. pallida effectors from this dataset using bioinformatics analysis, by screening clones in order to identify secreted proteins up-regulated after the onset of parasitism and using in situ hybridization to confirm the expression in pharyngeal gland cells. A substantial gene family encoding G. pallida SPRYSEC proteins has been identified. The expression of these genes is restricted to the dorsal pharyngeal gland cell. Different members of the SPRYSEC family of proteins from G. pallida show different subcellular localization patterns in plants, with some localized to the cytoplasm and others to the nucleus and nucleolus. Differences in subcellular localization may reflect diverse functional roles for each individual protein or, more likely, variety in the compartmentalization of plant proteins targeted by the nematode. Our data are therefore consistent with the suggestion that the SPRYSEC proteins suppress host defences, as suggested previously, and that they achieve this through interaction with a range of host targets.
FEBS Letters | 2001
Rachel L. Toth; Sean Chapman; Fiona Carr; Simon Santa Cruz
Potato virus X (PVX)‐based vector constructs were generated to investigate the use of an internal ribosome entry site (IRES) sequence to direct translation of a viral gene. The 148‐nucleotide IREScp sequence from a crucifer‐infecting strain of tobacco mosaic virus was used to direct expression of the PVX coat protein (CP). The IRES was inserted downstream of the gene encoding green fluorescent protein (GFP) and upstream of the PVX CP, in either sense or antisense orientation, such that CP expression depended on ribosome recruitment to the IRES. Stem–loop structures were inserted at either the 3′‐ or 5′‐end of the IRES sequence to investigate its mode of action. In vitro RNA transcripts were inoculated to Nicotiana benthamiana plants and protoplasts: levels of GFP and CP expression were analysed by enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay and the rate of virus cell‐to‐cell movement was determined by confocal laser scanning microscope imaging of GFP expression. PVX CP was expressed, allowing cell‐to‐cell movement of virus, from constructs containing the IRES sequence in either orientation, and from the construct containing a stem–loop structure at the 5′‐end of the IRES sequence. No CP was expressed from a construct containing a stem–loop at the 3′‐end of the IRES sequence. Our results suggest that the IRES sequence is acting in vivo to direct expression of the 3′‐proximal open reading frame in a bicistronic mRNA thereby demonstrating the potential of employing IRES sequences for the expression of foreign proteins from plant virus‐based vectors.
Current Biology | 2012
Michael J. Deeks; Joanna R. Calcutt; Elizabeth K.S. Ingle; Timothy J. Hawkins; Sean Chapman; A. Christine Richardson; David A. Mentlak; Martin R. Dixon; Frances Cartwright; Andrei P. Smertenko; Karl J. Oparka; Patrick J. Hussey
Complex animals use a wide variety of adaptor proteins to produce specialized sites of interaction between actin and membranes. Plants do not have these protein families, yet actin-membrane interactions within plant cells are critical for the positioning of subcellular compartments, for coordinating intercellular communication, and for membrane deformation. Novel factors are therefore likely to provide interfaces at actin-membrane contacts in plants, but their identity has remained obscure. Here we identify the plant-specific Networked (NET) superfamily of actin-binding proteins, members of which localize to the actin cytoskeleton and specify different membrane compartments. The founding member of the NET superfamily, NET1A, is anchored at the plasma membrane and predominates at cell junctions, the plasmodesmata. NET1A binds directly to actin filaments via a novel actin-binding domain that defines a superfamily of thirteen Arabidopsis proteins divided into four distinct phylogenetic clades. Members of other clades identify interactions at the tonoplast, nuclear membrane, and pollen tube plasma membrane, emphasizing the role of this superfamily in mediating actin-membrane interactions.