Journal Pre-proof Type III effectors xopN and avrBS2 contribute to the virulence of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola strain GX01 Zhou-Xiang Liao, Jian-Yuan Li, Xiu-Yu Mo, Zhe Ni, Wei Jiang, Yong-Qiang He, Sheng Huang PII:
S0923-2508(19)30120-2
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resmic.2019.10.002
Reference:
RESMIC 3745
To appear in:
Research in Microbiology
Received Date: 9 March 2019 Revised Date:
3 October 2019
Accepted Date: 3 October 2019
Please cite this article as: Z.-X. Liao, J.-Y. Li, X.-Y. Mo, Z. Ni, W. Jiang, Y.-Q. He, S. Huang, Type III effectors xopN and avrBS2 contribute to the virulence of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola strain GX01, Research in Microbiologoy, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resmic.2019.10.002. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2019 Institut Pasteur. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
1
Type III effectors xopN and avrBS2 contribute to the
2
virulence of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola strain
3
GX01
4
Running title: Virulence associated non-TAL type III
5
effector genes in Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola
6 7
Zhou-Xiang Liao a, Jian-Yuan Li a, Xiu-Yu Mo a, Zhe Ni a, Wei Jiang a, Yong-Qiang He
8
a, b
*, Sheng Huang a *
9
10
a
11
of Life Science and Technology, Guangxi University, 100 Daxue Road, Nanning Guangxi, 530004,
12
China
13
b
14
Guangxi University, 100 Daxue Road, Nanning Guangxi, 530004, China
State Key Laboratory for Conservation and Utilization of Subtropical Agro-bioresources, College
National Demonstration Center for Experimental Plant Science Education, College of Agriculture,
15 16 17
E-mail address:
[email protected] (ZX, Liao)
18
[email protected] (JY, Li)
19
[email protected]
20
[email protected] (Z, Ni)
21
[email protected] (W, Jiang)
22
[email protected] (YQ, He) *Correspondence and reprints
23
[email protected] (S, Huang) *Correspondence and reprints
(XY, Mo)
24 25 1
26
2
27
Abstract
28
Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola (Xoc) depends on its type III secretion system
29
(T3SS) to translocate type III secreted effectors (T3SEs), including transcription
30
activator-like effectors (TALEs) and non-transcription activator-like effectors
31
(non-TALEs), into host cells. T3SEs can promote the colonization of Xoc and
32
contribute to virulence by manipulating host cell physiology. We annotated 25 genes
33
encoding non-TALEs in Xoc strain GX01, an isolate from Guangxi in the South China’s
34
rice growing region. Through systematic mutagenesis of non-TALEs, we found that
35
xopN, the virulence contribution of which was previously unknown for Xoc,
36
significantly contributes to the virulence of Xoc GX01, as does avrBs2.
37 38
Key words: Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola; non-TAL type III effector genes;
39
virulence; avrBs2; xopN
40
3
41
Introduction
42
The Gram-negative bacterium Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola (Xoc) is the
43
causative agent of bacterial leaf streak (BLS), one of the most destructive diseases of
44
rice [1]. The pathogen enters rice leaves through stomata or wound sites and colonizes
45
intercellular spaces in the mesophyll, leading to water-soaking interveinal lesions that
46
develop into translucent streaks [1]. It is now well known the type III secretion system
47
(T3SS) plays a key role in Xoc infection of rice [2,3]. The T3SS is a complex
48
transmembrane structure that can deliver type three secreted effectors (T3SEs) into host
49
cells [4] where they can induce effector-triggered susceptibility (ETS), causing disease,
50
or effector triggered immunity (ETI), initiating resistance [4]. T3SEs in Xanthomonas
51
are divided into two major groups – the transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs)
52
and non-transcription activator-like effectors (non-TALEs) – depending on protein
53
structure and function [5]. Xoc harbors many non-TALEs and TALEs, but only a few
54
of these have been demonstrated to make major contributions to virulence in
55
Xanthomonas pathosystems [6,7], among them the non-TALEs avrBs2 and xopN [8–
56
12]. Interestingly, a recent study in which genes encoding non-TALES of the Chinese
57
strain RS105 established that only an avrBs2 mutant strain, but not a xopN mutant
58
strain was significantly impaired in virulence [13], raising the question of how
59
universal the contributions of “known” major effectors are. Therefore, we decided to
60
investigate non-TALE contributions within another Chinese Xoc strain.
61
Xoc strain GX01 was isolated from a BLS outbreak in Hezhou, Guangxi, China,
62
and is highly virulent on model rice cultivar Oryza sativa L cv. Nipponbare[14,15]. To
63
determine the virulence contributions of the non-TALEs in this strain, we identified
64
all putative effectors in Xoc GX01 based on sequence similarity, deleted the genes
65
encoding the non-TALEs individually, and assessed their contribution to virulence.
66
Materials and Methods 4
67
1.1 Bacteria strains and rice lines used in this study
68
Xoc strain GX01 is a rifampicin-resistant spontaneous mutant of strain LT4, which
69
was isolated from the rice leaf with typical BLS symptoms in Liantang Town in Hezhou
70
City in Guangxi, in the central area of South China’s rice growing region [14]. The
71
genome data of Xoc GX01 is available on GenBank (CP043403). Oryza sativa L. cv.
72
Nipponbare was used in this study as a susceptible host of Xoc GX01.
73
1.2 Bacteria growth
74
Xoc strains were grown in the rich medium nutrient broth (NB) or on nutrient agar
75
(NA) plates at 28°C [16]. GX01was routinely cultured with 50 µg/ml rifampicin.
76
Strains containing plasmids were grown with the appropriate antibiotics to maintain
77
selection for them.
78
1.3 Homologous-recombination based gene deletion and
79
80
insertional gene mutagenesis To
generate
non-TAL
effector
mutants,
we
employed
a
81
homologous-recombination based gene knock out technique. Briefly, for gene deletion,
82
two flanking fragments surrounding the target gene ORF were amplified from the Xoc
83
genome using the primer sets listed in Supplementary Table S1. Each pair of flanking
84
fragments for each target were cloned into the multiple cloning site (MCS) of
85
pK18mobSacB. The resulting recombinant plasmids were introduced into GX01 via
86
triparental conjugation. Kan-resistant merodiploid transconjugants were selected, and
87
then were grown on 10% sucrose to counter-select for plasmid integration, resulting in
88
a marker-free gene-deletion mutant that could be identified by colony PCR. For
89
insertional gene mutagenesis, a ~200 bp sequence inside the start codon of the target
90
gene was selected and amplified from the Xoc genome. The resulting fragments were
91
cloned into the MCS of pK18mob and introduced into GX01 via triparental conjugation. 5
92
The Kan-resistant transconjugants were selected and the insertion was confirmed by
93
colony PCR.
94
1.4 Mutant complementation
95
To complement each mutant in trans, we amplified the target gene with ORF and
96
cloned it into the MCS in pLARFJ [17]. The resulting plasmid was introduced into
97
designated mutants via triparental conjugation. Several Tet-resistant transconjugants
98
were selected, and the presence of the complementation plasmid was confirmed by
99
colony PCR.
100
1.5 Virulence assay
101
Rice seeds were germinated by submersion in water followed by incubation in the
102
dark for two days at 37°C. Five germinated seeds were planted in a small pot containing
103
autoclaved soil. The plants were grown in the greenhouse under a 14/10-h light/dark
104
cycle with a temperature controlled between 28°C and 30°C till they reached tillering
105
stage (about 30 to 45 days).
106
To prepare inoculum, Xoc strains were grown for 24 h at 28°C in NB medium, and
107
the cells were collected by centrifugation and re-suspended in DI water. The
108
concentration of the Xoc suspension was adjusted to O.D.600 = 0.5 (approximately 5.0 ×
109
107 CFU/mL) prior to infiltration.
110
Selected rice plants were inoculated with the Xoc suspension using syringe
111
infiltration [18]. For each plant, the last two leaves were picked and infiltrated 1/3 of
112
the way down from the leaf tip. The infiltrated plants were kept in a greenhouse and
113
water soaked lesions were measured after 14 days.
114
Results and discussion 6
115
We identified 25 putative non-TALEs in Xoc GX01 (Table 1 and supplementary
116
Table S2) by BLASTn using a database of known Xanthomonas effectors
117
(http://www.Xanthomonas.org). The majority of the non-TALEs in Xoc GX01 were
118
conserved with Xoc model strain BLS256 [7], and another Chinese local Xoc strain
119
RS105 [13]. Among these non-TALE genes, 20 of them are preceded by by a
120
plant-inducible promoter (PIP) box-like sequence [17] upstream of their coding
121
sequence (Table 1) follow by a positioned -10 box-like sequence, according GX01
122
genome data. Eight genes have a “perfect” PIP box, a TTCGB-(N15)-TTCGB motif
123
(Table 1) (where “N” refers to any nucleic acid bases, while “B” refers to a C, T or G,
124
but not A), and the others have a similar TTCGB-(N9~25)-TTCGB-(N30-32) motif.
125
The presence of PIP boxes and similar motifs suggested that these non-TALE gene’s
126
transcription might be regulated by the T3SS activator HrpX [17]. Meanwhile, we also
127
annotated all 27 TALEs in Xoc GX01, including 2 truncTALEs that lack of acidic
128
activation domain (supplementary Table S3). There are 4 TALEs present only in
129
GX01 and absent in BLS256 and RS105, while the other 21 TALEs have homologues
130
in BLS256 or RS105 (supplementary Table S3).
131
Using homologous-recombination based gene deletion, we successfully obtained
132
23 non-TALE mutants. An xopAJ insertion mutant named nKxopAJ was also
133
constructed. For unknown reasons, we could not mutate xopK by either deletion or
134
insertion, with several attempts. Plant assays of the non-TALE mutants indicated that
135
both avrBs2 and xopN mutants gave significantly shorter lesion at 14 days post
136
inoculation than did the wild-type strain (Fig 1), while the other 22 non-TALE mutants
137
did not show significant differences. To confirm the contributions of avrBs2 and xopN
138
to virulence, we complemented their mutants. The plant assays demonstrated that both
139
complementations restored impaired virulence of the mutants (Fig 2). This result
140
demonstrates that avrBs2 and xopN contribute to virulence in Xoc GX01 individually.
141
In a previous study, Li et al., (2015 ) found only avrBs2 but not xopN was required for
142
full virulence in Xoc RS105 [13]. Compare to RS105, the amino acid sequence of 7
143
XopN in GX01 have only one aa difference at Q704H, which is unlikely to result any
144
meaningful functional difference. This suggests non-TALEs may have different
145
contributions to virulence in different genomic backgrounds. XopN may play a more
146
important role in Nipponbare compare to Jiangang 30, the rice cultivar being used in
147
that study. On the other hand, one cannot exclude that the contribution of xopN to
148
virulence is masked in strain RS105, since RS105 is harboring six genes encoding
149
TALEs not present in strain GX01 and these additional genes may be
150
functionally-redundant with xopN. Furthermore, a double deletion mutant of both
151
avrBs2 and xopN was constructed. The virulence assay showed that the double mutant
152
caused shorter lesions than the single avrBs2 or xopN knockout mutants (Fig 2). This
153
suggests that avrBs2 and xopN have a cumulative effect on bacterial virulence.
154
Both avrBs2 and xopN are conserved in most xanthomonads. Their involvement
155
in bacterial virulence has been reported in Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris
156
(Xcc), Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria (Xcv), Xanthomonas axonopodis pv.
157
manihotis (Xam), and Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. punicae (Xap) and the mechanism
158
by which they contribute to disease has been the subject of significant attention [8–12].
159
avrBs2 was also reported to be involved in virulence in Xoc [13], and xopN in
160
Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo) [19]. Previous studies showed that AvrBs2 was
161
able to suppress pathogen-associated molecular pattern triggered immunity (PTI) in
162
planta
163
glycelophodiesterase domain which was related to virulence [9], but the mechanism
164
by which AvrBs2 suppresses PTI remains unknown. Unlike in Xoc RS105, xopN
165
contributes to the virulence of GX01 [13], which is consistent with the major
166
virulence role of its orthologs in Xcc, Xcv, and Xoo strains. XopN is thought to
167
interfere with immune signaling involved in plant innate immunity in Xcv [10],
168
reducing the plant callus deposition in both Xoo [19] and Xam [12], and weakening
169
host reactive oxygen species production in Xap [11]. All these studies suggest that
170
both avrBs2 and xopN play crucial roles in suppressing immune responses of host
[12,13].
A
biochemical
function
8
study
showed
AvrBs2
had
a
171
plants, thus allowing disease development. In summary, we annotated 25 non-TALE genes in Xoc GX01, a Chinese Xoc
172 173
strain, and mutated 24 of them. We discovered that, dissimilar to Chinese Xoc strain
174
RS105, both avrBs2 and xopN are required for the full virulence of GX01, and their
175
effect is additive. Mutation of the other 22 non-TALEs did not significantly alter
176
bacterial virulence in our study, but since functional redundancy can mask the
177
contributions of individual effectors, further investigations are required to determine
178
their roles in pathogenicity.
179
Conflict of interest The authors have no actual or potential conflict of interest to disclose.
180
181
Funding This research is sponsored by the National Key R&D Program of China
182 183
(2018YFD0200300),
184
(31860032,31660505), the Ba Gui Scholar Program of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous
185
Region of China (2014A002) and the 100 Talent Program for Colleges and
186
Universities in Guangxi to Sheng Huang
187
References
188
[1]
189 190
the
National
Natural
Science
Foundation
of
China
Niño-Liu DO, Ronald PC, Bogdanove AJ. Xanthomonas oryzae pathovars: model pathogens of a model crop. Mol Plant Pathol 2006;7:303–24. doi:10.1111/j.1364-3703.2006.00344.x.
[2]
Li Y-R, Zou H-S, Che Y-Z, Cui Y-P, Guo W, Zou L-F, et al. A novel regulatory role of HrpD6 in
191
regulating hrp-hrc-hpa genes in Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola. Mol Plant Microbe Interact
192
2011;24:1086–101. doi:10.1094/MPMI-09-10-0205.
193 194
[3]
Cernadas RA, Doyle EL, Niño-Liu DO, Wilkins KE, Bancroft T, Wang L, et al. Code-Assisted Discovery of TAL Effector Targets in Bacterial Leaf Streak of Rice Reveals Contrast with 9
195
Bacterial Blight and a Novel Susceptibility Gene. PLoS Pathog 2014;10:e1003972.
196
doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1003972.
197
[4]
198 199
Microbiol Rev 2016;40:894–937. doi:10.1093/femsre/fuw026. [5]
200 201
Büttner D. Behind the lines-actions of bacterial type III effector proteins in plant cells. FEMS
White FF, Potnis N, Jones JB, Koebnik R. The type III effectors of Xanthomonas. Mol Plant Pathol 2009. doi:10.1111/j.1364-3703.2009.00590.x.
[6]
Wilkins KE, Booher NJ, Wang L, Bogdanove AJ. TAL effectors and activation of predicted host
202
targets distinguish Asian from African strains of the rice pathogen Xanthomonas oryzae pv.
203
oryzicola while strict conservation suggests universal importance of five TAL effectors. Front
204
Plant Sci 2015;6:298–305. doi:10.3389/fpls.2015.00536.
205
[7]
Bogdanove AJ, Koebnik R, Lu H, Furutani A, Angiuoli S V, Patil PB, et al. Two new complete
206
genome sequences offer insight into host and tissue specificity of plant pathogenic Xanthomonas
207
spp. J Bacteriol 2011;193:5450–64. doi:10.1128/JB.05262-11.
208
[8]
Jiang B-L, He Y-Q, Cen W-J, Wei H-Y, Jiang G-F, Jiang W, et al. The type III secretion effector
209
XopXccN of Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris is required for full virulence. Res
210
Microbiol 2008;159:216–20. doi:10.1016/j.resmic.2007.12.004.
211
[9]
Zhao B, Dahlbeck D, Krasileva K V, Fong RW, Staskawicz BJ. Computational and biochemical
212
analysis of the Xanthomonas effector AvrBs2 and its role in the modulation of Xanthomonas type
213
three effector delivery. PLoS Pathog 2011;7:e1002408. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002408.
214
[10]
Taylor KW, Kim J-GG, Su XB, Aakre CD, Roden JA, Adams CM, et al. Tomato TFT1 is
215
required for PAMP-triggered immunity and mutations that prevent T3S effector XopN from
216
binding to TFT1 attenuate Xanthomonas virulence. PLoS Pathog 2012;8:e1002768.
217
doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002768.
218
[11]
Kumar R, Soni M, Mondal KK. XopN-T3SS effector of Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. punicae
219
localizes to the plasma membrane and modulates ROS accumulation events during blight
220
pathogenesis in pomegranate. Microbiol Res 2016;193:111–20.
221
doi:10.1016/j.micres.2016.10.001.
222 223
[12]
Bernal A, Restrepo S, Trujillo CA, Medina CA, Joe A, Bejarano DA, et al. The role of type III effectors from Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. manihotis in virulence and suppression of plant 10
224 225
immunity. Mol Plant Pathol 2017;19:593–606. doi:10.1111/mpp.12545. [13]
Li S, Wang Y, Wang S, Fang A, Wang J, Liu L, et al. The Type III Effector AvrBs2 in
226
Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola Suppresses Rice Immunity and Promotes Disease
227
Development. Mol Plant-Microbe Interact 2015;28:869–80. doi:10.1094/MPMI-10-14-0314-R.
228
[14]
Xiao Y, Wei X, Gao H, Niu X, Cen Z, Huang P, et al. Characterization of a Xanthomonas oryzae
229
pv. oryzicola strain and the establishment of its genetic manipulation system. Genomics Appl
230
Biol 2011;30:1211–7. doi:10.5376/gab.cn.2011.30.0033.
231
[15]
Zhang Z-C, Zhao M, Xu L-D, Niu X-N, Qin H-P, Li Y-M, et al. Genome-Wide Screening for
232
Novel Candidate Virulence Related Response Regulator Genes in Xanthomonas oryzae pv.
233
oryzicola. Front Microbiol 2018;9:1–16. doi:10.3389/fmicb.2018.01789.
234
[16]
235 236
Yang B, Bogdanove A. Inoculation and virulence assay for bacterial blight and bacterial leaf streak of rice. Methods Mol Biol 2013;956:249–55. doi:10.1007/978-1-62703-194-3_18.
[17]
Jiang W, Jiang B-L, Xu R-Q, Huang J-D, Wei H-Y, Jiang G-F, et al. Identification of six type III
237
effector genes with the PIP box in Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris and five of them
238
contribute individually to full pathogenicity. Mol Plant Microbe Interact 2009;22:1401–11.
239
doi:10.1094/MPMI-22-11-1401.
240
[18]
Zou HS, Yuan L, Guo W, Li YR, Che YZ, Zou LF, et al. Construction of a Tn5-tagged mutant
241
library of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola as an invaluable resource for functional genomics.
242
Curr Microbiol 2011;62:908–16. doi:10.1007/s00284-010-9804-1.
243
[19]
Cheong H, Kim C-Y, Jeon J-S, Lee B-M, Sun Moon J, Hwang I. Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae
244
Type III Effector XopN Targets OsVOZ2 and a Putative Thiamine Synthase as a Virulence
245
Factor in Rice. PLoS One 2013;8:e73346. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0073346.
246
11
247
Figure Legends
248
Figure 1. Virulence assays of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola GX01 type III
249
secreted non-TAL effectors mutants. (A) Results showed rice leave in tillering stage
250
inoculated with non-TALE knock out mutants of GX01. The T3SE mutants ∆avrBs2
251
and ∆xopN had shorter lesions 14 days post inoculation, compared with wild-type.
252
Values are the mean lesion length ± standard deviation (SD) from three repeats, each
253
with 20 lesions. “**” represents marked values are significantly different from wild
254
type in a Student's t-test followed by Šidák correction, with α = 0.01. (B)
255
Representative lesions caused by each mutant.
256 257
Figure 2. avrBs2 and xopN are necessary for the full pathogenicity of
258
Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola GX01. (A) Virulence assays show that
259
complemented strains ∆avrBs2/pLARFJ::avrBs2 and ∆xopN/pLARFJ::∆xopN have
260
restored virulence. ∆avrBs2∆xopN, an avrBs2 and xopN double knockout mutant,
261
caused shorter lesions compared to avrBs2 or xopN single knockout mutants. Values
262
are the mean lesion length ± standard deviation (SD) from three repeats, each with 10
263
lesions. Values with the same letter are not significantly different after the
264
Ryan-Einot-Gabriel-Welsh F (REGWF) procedure, with α = 0.05. (B) Representative
265
lesions caused by each strain.
266
12
Table 1. PIP-Boxes of Non-TAL effectors of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola GX01 Gene ID Gene name PIP-box and -10 motifa TTCGCATCCCGGTGGCATATTTCGCCTCGGGTGCGAATTGTCATATTTCATGCGGTCTACTGA XOCgx_4849 avrBs2 TTCGTCGTCCCAGCCAGGACTTCGGTGAGGCGAAGCAAATTGGAGAGCTACTCGCCAAACT XOCgx_2377 xopAA TTCGCACAGGTCGTCGGCGCTTCGTATTGAAGAAGTCGCTCGCGGGCAGATTGACTAAATGT XOCgx_0233 xopAD TTCGTTCGCTGCTCATATAGTTCGTAAGGTGTGCGAGTTGCGATTCGAATCGCTCTTAATGT XOCgx_0675 xopAJ TTCGTGTATGGCGCGGTTGGTTCGCCGCGCTCCGTTCGGGTGCGTATTTCATAGCGAAACAATAT XOCgx_0272 xopF1 TTCGTTTACAGAATCGCTTGTTCGTCGCAGCAAGACTGGCTGGAGAGGACAGGCGCACCAT XOCgx_1511 xopK TTCGCCAGGATAAAGATGACTTCGCCCCAAGGGCGTCGTGCTTAGCGTGGCATACCGATCAT XOCgx_1505 xopL TTCGGACTGCGCGACGCCGGTTCGCCCCCCGTCTTCGGCACCGCAATGGGATCGCTACGAT XOCgx_0115 xopR TTCGCAAGTTCTGCAGCTTTTTCGGCTGGGTGGGAGCGTTTTTGGCCAGGGTCTGTCAATTT XOCgx_2374 xopU TTCGCCTATTGCGCGGAGCATTCGCAAAACGAACCCTCCCGCCTCAGGCAACGCGACATCCT XOCgx_1283 xopY TTCGCGCAGGCGAACGCGATTTCTGCCAGTGCGCGCGGACACGAGATCGCTTTCGGGAAAGT XOCgx_4122 xopI TTCGGATGCAGCGACGTCAGTTCTGTTGTCCGGCAGAGGTGGCCCCGGCAGTTTGATTCAAT XOCgx_4624 xopN TTCGTCGCCGCACACAGGAATTCAGCACGCCGCCCTGGCGCTGCGCTGGACGTGGGTAACGT XOCgx_4891 xopQ TTCTGCTTTCAGTGCAACATTTCGCACTTGCCGCATGCTGCGGCTGCGCCTGTTCCGATCAT XOCgx_4341 xopX TTCTCTTTCCAAGCGACCACTTCGCGCAGCTGCAATGCCTCGAACGCGCCGCGCAATATTGT XOCgx_2461 xopZ1 TTCGCTTTCCAGCCCCATCGTTTCGGCAGCGGGCGCGTCTTCATGCAGGGGCGATGCGAGGAT XOCgx_0801 xopAK TTCGGCTCCAAAGTCATTCGGAATGGTGGAAAATTTTTCCTCCTGCGCCCACTGAGT XOCgx_3839 xopO TTCGCCAAGCGATACAGCCTCTTCACTTCGATGCGGCGATGGCAGTCGCATCGCATTAGCCT XOCgx_0265 xopAE TTCTCCGGGCACGGCGTTAGCATCTTGCGTCTTCACTGGGCAATGAATGACTCACATGGGTAACTG XOCgx_4518 xopAF TTCGCGTTAGCCACAGCTTCGATCGTGCAACCAGCATGCGTATCTGCGCAATGT XOCgx_3671 xopC2 TTCTGCAAGGCAGCGAAGGCTTTCGCCAAATCGCACATCGATTCTGCTGTGAGCGGTATGCA XOCgx_4305 xopV TTCAGGCCTCGTTGTTCAGATCTTCCTTATGTTGCCAAGTTGCGGCGTGGTGTTTAAATCATTTT XOCgx_4471 xopW N.A XOCgx_3272 xopAB N.A XOCgx_3675 xopP-1 N.A XOCgx_3674 xopP-2 a. PIP-box and -10 motifs are shown in bold. Underlined bases mean they mismatch standard PIP-box or -10 motifs. b. Too far away from ORF; may not functional. c. PIP-box is upstream of neighboring gene hpa3; xopF1 may be co-transcribed with hpa3 and share the same PIP-box.
distance to ORF 27 700b 6 52 682c 29 33 27 16 26 54 202 187 52 99 31 52 274 193 67 49 23 N.A N.A N.A