Virulence Factor Identification in the Banana Pathogen Dickeya zeae MS2
The phytopathogen MS2 is a particularly virulent agent of banana soft rot disease. To begin to understand this banana disease and to understand the role of quorum sensing and quorum-sensing-related regulatory elements in MS2, we sequenced its genome and queried the sequence for genes encoding LuxR h...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied and environmental microbiology 2019-12, Vol.85 (23), p.1 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The phytopathogen
MS2 is a particularly virulent agent of banana soft rot disease. To begin to understand this banana disease and to understand the role of quorum sensing and quorum-sensing-related regulatory elements in
MS2, we sequenced its genome and queried the sequence for genes encoding LuxR homologs. We identified a canonical LuxR-LuxI homolog pair similar to those in other members of the genus
The quorum-sensing signal for this pair was
-3-oxo-hexanoyl-homoserine lactone, and the circuit affected motility, cell clumping, and production of the pigment indigoidine, but it did not affect infections of banana seedlings in our experiments. We also identified a
homolog linked to a gene annotated as encoding a proline iminopeptidase. Similar linked pairs have been associated with virulence in other plant pathogens. We show that mutants with deletions in the proline iminopeptidase gene are attenuated for virulence. Surprisingly, a mutant with a deletion in the gene encoding the LuxR homolog shows normal virulence.
is an emerging banana soft rot pathogen in China. We used genome sequencing and annotation to create an inventory of potential virulence factors and virulence gene regulators encoded in
MS2, a particularly virulent strain. We created mutations in several genes and tested these mutants in a banana seedling infection model. A strain with a mutated proline iminopeptidase gene, homologs of which are important for disease in the
species phytopathogens, was attenuated for soft rot symptoms in our model. Understanding how the proline iminopeptidase functions as a virulence factor may lead to insights about how to control the disease, and it is of general importance as homologs of the proline iminopeptidase occur in dozens of plant-associated bacteria. |
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ISSN: | 0099-2240 1098-5336 1098-5336 |
DOI: | 10.1128/AEM.01611-19 |