Plasmid composition and the chpG gene determine the virulence level of Clavibacter capsici natural isolates in pepper

The gram‐positive bacterial species Clavibacter capsici causes necrosis and canker in pepper plants. Genomic and functional analyses of C. capsici type strain PF008 have shown that multiple virulence genes exist in its two plasmids. We aimed to identify the key determinants that control the virulenc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular plant pathology 2020-06, Vol.21 (6), p.808-819
Hauptverfasser: Hwang, In Sun, Lee, Hyo Min, Oh, Eom‐Ji, Lee, Seungdon, Heu, Sunggi, Oh, Chang‐Sik
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The gram‐positive bacterial species Clavibacter capsici causes necrosis and canker in pepper plants. Genomic and functional analyses of C. capsici type strain PF008 have shown that multiple virulence genes exist in its two plasmids. We aimed to identify the key determinants that control the virulence of C. capsici. Pepper leaves inoculated with 54 natural isolates exhibited significant variation in the necrosis. Six isolates showed very low virulence, but their population titres in plants were not significantly different from those of the highly virulent isolates. All six isolates lacked the pCM1Cc plasmid that carries chpG, which has been shown to be required for virulence and encodes a putative serine protease, but two of them, isolates 1,106 and 1,207, had the intact chpG elsewhere in the genome. Genomic analysis of these two isolates revealed that chpG was located in the pCM2Cc plasmid, and two highly homologous regions were present next to the chpG locus. The chpG expression in isolate 1,106 was not induced in plants. Introduction of chpG of the PF008 strain into the six low‐virulence isolates restored their virulence to that of PF008. Our findings indicate that there are at least three different variant groups of C. capsici and that the plasmid composition and the chpG gene are critical for determining the virulence level. Moreover, our findings also indicate that the virulence level of C. capsici does not directly correlate with bacterial titres in plants. Natural isolates of the gram‐positive bacterium Clavibacter capsici show different levels of virulence in pepper due to different plasmid composition and the chpG gene, encoding a putative serine protease.
ISSN:1464-6722
1364-3703
DOI:10.1111/mpp.12932