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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 4438, 2024 May 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38806462

RESUMEN

Various microbes isolated from healthy plants are detrimental under laboratory conditions, indicating the existence of molecular mechanisms preventing disease in nature. Here, we demonstrated that application of sodium chloride (NaCl) in natural and gnotobiotic soil systems is sufficient to induce plant disease caused by an otherwise non-pathogenic root-derived Pseudomonas brassicacearum isolate (R401). Disease caused by combinatorial treatment of NaCl and R401 triggered extensive, root-specific transcriptional reprogramming that did not involve down-regulation of host innate immune genes, nor dampening of ROS-mediated immunity. Instead, we identified and structurally characterized the R401 lipopeptide brassicapeptin A as necessary and sufficient to promote disease on salt-treated plants. Brassicapeptin A production is salt-inducible, promotes root colonization and transitions R401 from being beneficial to being detrimental on salt-treated plants by disturbing host ion homeostasis, thereby bolstering susceptibility to osmolytes. We conclude that the interaction between a global change stressor and a single exometabolite from a member of the root microbiome promotes plant disease in complex soil systems.


Asunto(s)
Presión Osmótica , Enfermedades de las Plantas , Raíces de Plantas , Pseudomonas , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Pseudomonas/metabolismo , Pseudomonas/genética , Raíces de Plantas/microbiología , Raíces de Plantas/metabolismo , Cloruro de Sodio/farmacología , Cloruro de Sodio/metabolismo , Microbiología del Suelo , Lipopéptidos/farmacología , Lipopéptidos/metabolismo , Arabidopsis/microbiología , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Arabidopsis/genética , Arabidopsis/efectos de los fármacos
2.
Angew Chem Weinheim Bergstr Ger ; 135(34): e202218783, 2023 Aug 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38515502

RESUMEN

The ß-barrel assembly machinery (BAM complex) is essential for outer membrane protein (OMP) folding in Gram-negative bacteria, and represents a promising antimicrobial target. Several conformational states of BAM have been reported, but all have been obtained under conditions which lack the unique features and complexity of the outer membrane (OM). Here, we use Pulsed Electron-Electron Double Resonance (PELDOR, or DEER) spectroscopy distance measurements to interrogate the conformational ensemble of the BAM complex in E. coli cells. We show that BAM adopts a broad ensemble of conformations in the OM, while in the presence of the antibiotic darobactin B (DAR-B), BAM's conformational equilibrium shifts to a restricted ensemble consistent with the lateral closed state. Our in-cell PELDOR findings are supported by new cryoEM structures of BAM in the presence and absence of DAR-B. This work demonstrates the utility of PELDOR to map conformational changes in BAM within its native cellular environment.

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