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Dive into the research topics where Sebastian Schornack is active.

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Featured researches published by Sebastian Schornack.


Science | 2009

Breaking the Code of DNA Binding Specificity of TAL-Type III Effectors

Jens Boch; Heidi Scholze; Sebastian Schornack; Angelika Landgraf; Simone Hahn; Sabine Kay; Thomas Lahaye; Anja Nickstadt; Ulla Bonas

TAL Order Xanthomonas bacteria attack their plant hosts by delivering their own transcription-activator–like (TAL) proteins into the plant cell nucleus and alter the plants gene regulation (see the Perspective by Voytas and Joung). Moscou and Bogdanove (p. 1501, published online 29 October: see the cover) and Boch et al. (p. 1509, published online 29 October) have now discovered how the similar but not identical repeats in the TAL proteins encode the specificity needed for the proteins to find their targets. Each repeat is specific for one DNA base pair, a specificity encoded by hypervariable amino acid positions. Combining several repeats with different amino acids in the hypervariable positions allowed the production of new effectors that targeted new DNA sites. Artificial effectors with new specificities have been constructed that mimic proteins injected into plant cells by pathogens. The pathogenicity of many bacteria depends on the injection of effector proteins via type III secretion into eukaryotic cells in order to manipulate cellular processes. TAL (transcription activator–like) effectors from plant pathogenic Xanthomonas are important virulence factors that act as transcriptional activators in the plant cell nucleus, where they directly bind to DNA via a central domain of tandem repeats. Here, we show how target DNA specificity of TAL effectors is encoded. Two hypervariable amino acid residues in each repeat recognize one base pair in the target DNA. Recognition sequences of TAL effectors were predicted and experimentally confirmed. The modular protein architecture enabled the construction of artificial effectors with new specificities. Our study describes the functionality of a distinct type of DNA binding domain and allows the design of DNA binding domains for biotechnology.


Nature | 2009

Genome sequence and analysis of the Irish potato famine pathogen Phytophthora infestans

Brian J. Haas; Sophien Kamoun; Michael C. Zody; Rays H. Y. Jiang; Robert E. Handsaker; Liliana M. Cano; Manfred Grabherr; Chinnappa D. Kodira; Sylvain Raffaele; Trudy Torto-Alalibo; Tolga O. Bozkurt; Audrey M. V. Ah-Fong; Lucia Alvarado; Vicky L. Anderson; Miles R. Armstrong; Anna O. Avrova; Laura Baxter; Jim Beynon; Petra C. Boevink; Stephanie R. Bollmann; Jorunn I. B. Bos; Vincent Bulone; Guohong Cai; Cahid Cakir; James C. Carrington; Megan Chawner; Lucio Conti; Stefano Costanzo; Richard Ewan; Noah Fahlgren

Phytophthora infestans is the most destructive pathogen of potato and a model organism for the oomycetes, a distinct lineage of fungus-like eukaryotes that are related to organisms such as brown algae and diatoms. As the agent of the Irish potato famine in the mid-nineteenth century, P. infestans has had a tremendous effect on human history, resulting in famine and population displacement. To this day, it affects world agriculture by causing the most destructive disease of potato, the fourth largest food crop and a critical alternative to the major cereal crops for feeding the world’s population. Current annual worldwide potato crop losses due to late blight are conservatively estimated at


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2010

TAL effectors: finding plant genes for disease and defense

Adam J. Bogdanove; Sebastian Schornack; Thomas Lahaye

6.7 billion. Management of this devastating pathogen is challenged by its remarkable speed of adaptation to control strategies such as genetically resistant cultivars. Here we report the sequence of the P. infestans genome, which at ∼240 megabases (Mb) is by far the largest and most complex genome sequenced so far in the chromalveolates. Its expansion results from a proliferation of repetitive DNA accounting for ∼74% of the genome. Comparison with two other Phytophthora genomes showed rapid turnover and extensive expansion of specific families of secreted disease effector proteins, including many genes that are induced during infection or are predicted to have activities that alter host physiology. These fast-evolving effector genes are localized to highly dynamic and expanded regions of the P. infestans genome. This probably plays a crucial part in the rapid adaptability of the pathogen to host plants and underpins its evolutionary potential.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Ancient class of translocated oomycete effectors targets the host nucleus

Sebastian Schornack; Mireille van Damme; Tolga O. Bozkurt; Liliana M. Cano; Matthew Smoker; Marco Thines; Elodie Gaulin; Sophien Kamoun; Edgar Huitema

Transcription activator like effectors (TALEs) are injected via the type III secretion pathway of many plant pathogenic Xanthomonas spp. into plant cells where they contribute to disease or trigger resistance by binding to DNA and turning on TALE-specific host genes. Advances in our understanding of TALEs and their targets have yielded new models for pathogen recognition and defense. Similarly, we have gained insight into plant molecules and processes that can be co-opted to promote infection. Recent elucidation of the basis for specificity in DNA binding by TALEs expedites further discovery and opens the door to biotechnological applications. This article reviews the most significant findings in TALE research, with a focus on recent advances, and discusses future prospects including pressing questions yet to be answered.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Apoplastic effectors secreted by two unrelated eukaryotic plant pathogens target the tomato defense protease Rcr3

Jing Song; Joe Win; Miaoying Tian; Sebastian Schornack; Farnusch Kaschani; M. Ilyas; Renier A. L. van der Hoorn; Sophien Kamoun

Pathogens use specialized secretion systems and targeting signals to translocate effector proteins inside host cells, a process that is essential for promoting disease and parasitism. However, the amino acid sequences that determine host delivery of eukaryotic pathogen effectors remain mostly unknown. The Crinkler (CRN) proteins of oomycete plant pathogens, such as the Irish potato famine organism Phytophthora infestans, are modular proteins with predicted secretion signals and conserved N-terminal sequence motifs. Here, we provide direct evidence that CRN N termini mediate protein transport into plant cells. CRN host translocation requires a conserved motif that is present in all examined plant pathogenic oomycetes, including the phylogenetically divergent species Aphanomyces euteiches that does not form haustoria, specialized infection structures that have been implicated previously in delivery of effectors. Several distinct CRN C termini localized to plant nuclei and, in the case of CRN8, required nuclear accumulation to induce plant cell death. These results reveal a large family of ubiquitous oomycete effector proteins that target the host nucleus. Oomycetes appear to have acquired the ability to translocate effector proteins inside plant cells relatively early in their evolution and before the emergence of haustoria. Finally, this work further implicates the host nucleus as an important cellular compartment where the fate of plant–microbe interactions is determined.


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

Phytophthora infestans effector AVRblb2 prevents secretion of a plant immune protease at the haustorial interface

Tolga O. Bozkurt; Sebastian Schornack; Joe Win; Takayuki Shindo; M. Ilyas; Ricardo Oliva; Liliana M. Cano; Alexandra M. E. Jones; Edgar Huitema; R. A. L. Van der Hoorn; Sophien Kamoun

Current models of plant–pathogen interactions stipulate that pathogens secrete effector proteins that disable plant defense components known as virulence targets. Occasionally, the perturbations caused by these effectors trigger innate immunity via plant disease resistance proteins as described by the “guard hypothesis.” This model is nicely illustrated by the interaction between the fungal plant pathogen Cladosporium fulvum and tomato. C. fulvum secretes a protease inhibitor Avr2 that targets the tomato cysteine protease Rcr3pim. In plants that carry the resistance protein Cf2, Rcr3pim is required for resistance to C. fulvum strains expressing Avr2, thus fulfilling one of the predictions of the guard hypothesis. Another prediction of the guard hypothesis has not yet been tested. Considering that virulence targets are important components of defense, different effectors from unrelated pathogens are expected to evolve to disable the same host target. In this study we confirm this prediction using a different pathogen of tomato, the oomycete Phytophthora infestans that is distantly related to fungi such as C. fulvum. This pathogen secretes an array of protease inhibitors including EPIC1 and EPIC2B that inhibit tomato cysteine proteases. Here we show that, similar to Avr2, EPIC1 and EPIC2B bind and inhibit Rcr3pim. However, unlike Avr2, EPIC1 and EPIC2B do not trigger hypersensitive cell death or defenses on Cf-2/Rcr3pim tomato. We also found that the rcr3–3 mutant of tomato that carries a premature stop codon in the Rcr3 gene exhibits enhanced susceptibility to P. infestans, suggesting a role for Rcr3pim in defense. In conclusion, our findings fulfill a key prediction of the guard hypothesis and suggest that the effectors Avr2, EPIC1, and EPIC2B secreted by two unrelated pathogens of tomato target the same defense protease Rcr3pim. In contrast to C. fulvum, P. infestans appears to have evolved stealthy effectors that carry inhibitory activity without triggering plant innate immunity.


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 2012

Effector Biology of Plant-Associated Organisms: Concepts and Perspectives

Joe Win; Angela Chaparro-Garcia; Khaoula Belhaj; Diane G. O. Saunders; Kakoto Yoshida; S. Dong; Sebastian Schornack; Cyril Zipfel; Silke Robatzek; Saskia A. Hogenhout; Sophien Kamoun

In response to pathogen attack, plant cells secrete antimicrobial molecules at the site of infection. However, how plant pathogens interfere with defense-related focal secretion remains poorly known. Here we show that the host-translocated RXLR-type effector protein AVRblb2 of the Irish potato famine pathogen Phytophthora infestans focally accumulates around haustoria, specialized infection structures that form inside plant cells, and promotes virulence by interfering with the execution of host defenses. AVRblb2 significantly enhances susceptibility of host plants to P. infestans by targeting the host papain-like cysteine protease C14 and specifically preventing its secretion into the apoplast. Plants altered in C14 expression were significantly affected in susceptibility to P. infestans in a manner consistent with a positive role of C14 in plant immunity. Our findings point to a unique counterdefense strategy that plant pathogens use to neutralize secreted host defense proteases. Effectors, such as AVRblb2, can be used as molecular probes to dissect focal immune responses at pathogen penetration sites.


Current Biology | 2012

A Common Signaling Process that Promotes Mycorrhizal and Oomycete Colonization of Plants

Ertao Wang; Sebastian Schornack; John F. Marsh; Enrico Gobbato; Benjamin Schwessinger; Peter J. Eastmond; Michael Schultze; Sophien Kamoun; Giles E. D. Oldroyd

Every plant is closely associated with a variety of living organisms. Therefore, deciphering how plants interact with mutualistic and parasitic organisms is essential for a comprehensive understanding of the biology of plants. The field of plant-biotic interactions has recently coalesced around an integrated model. Major classes of molecular players both from plants and their associated organisms have been revealed. These include cell surface and intracellular immune receptors of plants as well as apoplastic and host-cell-translocated (cytoplasmic) effectors of the invading organism. This article focuses on effectors, molecules secreted by plant-associated organisms that alter plant processes. Effectors have emerged as a central class of molecules in our integrated view of plant-microbe interactions. Their study has significantly contributed to advancing our knowledge of plant hormones, plant development, plant receptors, and epigenetics. Many pathogen effectors are extraordinary examples of biological innovation; they include some of the most remarkable proteins known to function inside plant cells. Here, we review some of the key concepts that have emerged from the study of the effectors of plant-associated organisms. In particular, we focus on how effectors function in plant tissues and discuss future perspectives in the field of effector biology.


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2012

Oomycetes, effectors, and all that jazz

Tolga O. Bozkurt; Sebastian Schornack; Mark J. Banfield; Sophien Kamoun

The symbiotic association between plants and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi is almost ubiquitous within the plant kingdom, and the early stages of the association are controlled by plant-derived strigolactones acting as a signal to the fungus in the rhizosphere and lipochito-oligosaccharides acting as fungal signals to the plant. Hyphopodia form at the root surface, allowing the initial invasion, and this is analogous to appressoria, infection structures of pathogenic fungi and oomycetes. Here, we characterize RAM2, a gene of Medicago truncatula required for colonization of the root by mycorrhizal fungi, which is necessary for appropriate hyphopodia and arbuscule formation. RAM2 encodes a glycerol-3-phosphate acyl transferase (GPAT) and is involved in the production of cutin monomers. Plants defective in RAM2 are unable to be colonized by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi but also show defects in colonization by an oomycete pathogen, with the absence of appressoria formation. RAM2 defines a direct signaling function, because exogenous addition of the C16 aliphatic fatty acids associated with cutin are sufficient to promote hyphopodia/appressoria formation. Thus, cutin monomers act as plant signals that promote colonization by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, and this signaling function has been recruited by pathogenic oomycetes to facilitate their own invasion.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2009

Ten things to know about oomycete effectors.

Sebastian Schornack; Edgar Huitema; Liliana M. Cano; Tolga O. Bozkurt; Ricardo Oliva; Mireille van Damme; Simon Schwizer; Sylvain Raffaele; Angela Chaparro-Garcia; Rhys A. Farrer; María Eugenia Segretin; Jorunn I. B. Bos; Brian J. Haas; Michael C. Zody; Chad Nusbaum; Joe Win; Marco Thines; Sophien Kamoun

Plant pathogenic oomycetes secrete a diverse repertoire of effector proteins that modulate host innate immunity and enable parasitic infection. Understanding how effectors evolve, translocate and traffic inside host cells, and perturb host processes are major themes in the study of oomycete-plant interactions. The last year has seen important progress in the study of oomycete effectors with, notably, the elucidation of the 3D structures of five RXLR effectors, and novel insights into how cytoplasmic effectors subvert host cells. In this review, we discuss these and other recent advances and highlight the most important open questions in oomycete effector biology.

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Joe Win

Sainsbury Laboratory

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Thomas Rey

University of Cambridge

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