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Coping with environmental eukaryotes; identification of pseudomonas syringae genes during the interaction with alternative hosts or predators

Dorati, Federico; Barrett, Glyn A.; Sanchez-Contreras, Maria; Arseneault, Tanya; Jos�, Mateo San; Studholme, David J.; Murillo, Jes�s; Caballero, Primitivo; Waterfield, Nicholas R.; Arnold, Dawn L; Shaw, Liz J.; Jackson, Robert W.

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Authors

Federico Dorati

Glyn A. Barrett

Maria Sanchez-Contreras

Tanya Arseneault

Mateo San Jos�

David J. Studholme

Jes�s Murillo

Primitivo Caballero

Nicholas R. Waterfield

Dawn L Arnold

Liz J. Shaw

Robert W. Jackson



Abstract

Understanding the molecular mechanisms underpinning the ecological success of plant pathogens is critical to develop strategies for controlling diseases and protecting crops. Recent observations have shown that plant pathogenic bacteria, particularly Pseudomonas, exist in a range of natural environments away from their natural plant host e.g., water courses, soil, non-host plants. This exposes them to a variety of eukaryotic predators such as nematodes, insects and amoebae present in the environment. Nematodes and amoeba in particular are bacterial predators while insect herbivores may act as indirect predators, ingesting bacteria on plant tissue. We therefore postulated that bacteria are probably under selective pressure to avoid or survive predation and have therefore developed appropriate coping mechanisms. We tested the hypothesis that plant pathogenic Pseudomonas syringae are able to cope with predation pressure and found that three pathovars show weak, but significant resistance or toxicity. To identify the gene systems that contribute to resistance or toxicity we applied a heterologous screening technique, called Rapid Virulence Annotation (RVA), for anti-predation and toxicity mechanisms. Three cosmid libraries for P. syringae pv. aesculi, pv. tomato and pv. phaseolicola, of approximately 2000 cosmids each, were screened in the susceptible/non-toxic bacterium Escherichia coli against nematode, amoebae and an insect. A number of potential conserved and unique genes were identified which included genes encoding haemolysins, biofilm formation, motility and adhesion. These data provide the first multi-pathovar comparative insight to how plant pathogens cope with different predation pressures and infection of an insect gut and provide a foundation for further study into the function of selected genes and their role in ecological success.

Citation

Dorati, F., Barrett, G. A., Sanchez-Contreras, M., Arseneault, T., José, M. S., Studholme, D. J., …Jackson, R. W. (2018). Coping with environmental eukaryotes; identification of pseudomonas syringae genes during the interaction with alternative hosts or predators. Microorganisms, 6(2), Article 32. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms6020032

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 21, 2018
Publication Date Apr 21, 2018
Deposit Date Apr 25, 2018
Publicly Available Date Apr 25, 2018
Journal Microorganisms
Electronic ISSN 2076-2607
Publisher MDPI
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 6
Issue 2
Article Number 32
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms6020032
Keywords pseudomonas syringae, rapid virulence annotation, RVA, pathogen, anti-predation, Caenorhabditis elegans, Acanthamoeba polyphaga, Galleria mellonella
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/869208
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms6020032

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