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1.
Plant Dis ; 2024 Aug 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39115951

ABSTRACT

Carica papaya (papaya) in Guam, USA may experience soft rot symptoms, often referred to as mushy canker disease. Disease symptoms first appear as expanding water-soaked dark-green stem lesions or leaf spotting with chlorotic halos. Defoliation at petiole-stem junctions and crown necrosis leads to plant death. Papaya diseases caused by Erwinia spp. are documented in nearby tropic regions such as the Northern Mariana Islands (Trujillo and Schroth 1982), the Philippines (Dela Cueva et al. 2017), Japan (Hanagasaki et al. 2020), and Indonesia (Suharjo et al., 2021). The pathogen was isolated from symptomatic papaya stem sections (cv. Red Lady) from a nursery at the University of Guam Agriculture and Life Sciences building in April 2023. Approximately 20% of seedlings collapsed from stem soft rot, with nearly all plants showing varying degrees of water-soaked lesions on leaves or stems. Stem tissue from lesion margins was excised, surface sterilized with 70% EtOH, and macerated in sterile water. Macerate was plated onto nutrient agar (NA) and incubated at 28°C, yielding colonies that were clear to white in color, smooth, circular and mucoid on NA plates for five suspect isolates (JGD231-235). Strains produced blue diffusible pigment on King's B (KB) media, were Gram-negative rods, and exhibited swimming motility on semi-solid (0.5% agar) NA plates. Crown stab inoculation of ten papaya plants (cv. Red Lady) with isolates resulted in mushy canker symptoms within seven days, while negative control plants stabbed with a sterile probe remained asymptomatic. Koch's postulates were fulfilled by drench-inoculating spontaneous rifampicin-resistant (100µg/ml) mutants, JGD233r and JGD235r, onto ten papaya plants (cv. Solo Sunrise). Nine days post-inoculation, bacterial strains were recovered from symptomatic stem tissue macerate plated on rifampicin (100µg/ml) NA and incubated at 28°C. No symptoms or bacterial cells were recovered from the tissue of negative control plants. Cell morphology, culture phenotypes, and disease symptoms suggested the isolates were Erwinia spp., and blue pigment production on KB further suggested E. papayae (Gardan et al. 2004). Partial 16S rDNA sequences of Guam strains JGD231-235 (sequenced using PCR forward primer 5' - AGAGTTTGATCMTGGCTCAG - 3' and reverse primer 5' - GGTTACCTTGTTACGACTT - 3', GENEWIZ (South Plainfield, NJ)) were deposited into GenBank (OR577627- 631). Highest NCBI BLAST results for all strains showed a 16S rDNA sequence identity of 98.17-98.91% with those of Erwinia sp. I-leaf (LC590218) and E. mallotivora BT-MARDI (HQ456230). A maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree based on concatenated partial atpD, infB, and rpoB sequences of strains JGD232 (PP669340, PP669346, PP669343), JGD233 (PP669341, PP669347, PP669344), and JGD235 (PP669342, PP669348, PP669345) (Brady et al. 2008) constructed using MEGA11 (Tamura et al. 2021) showed all strains formed a monophyletic group with Erwinia sp. I-leaf (Hanagasaki et al. 2020) and E. papayae NCPPB 4294T (Gardan et al. 2004), supported with 98% bootstrap. This note documents the first occurrence of E. papayae as a papaya pathogen in Guam. Papaya cultivation supports sustainable food security for Guam (Bevacqua and Sayama 2023), and Erwinia spp. pathogens threaten papaya on other Pacific islands like Hawaii. These findings convey the need for effective quarantine practices, local disease management, and further research on this pathogen.

2.
Environ Microbiol ; 12(6): 1762-74, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20553555

ABSTRACT

Leaf surfaces harbour bacterial epiphytes that are capable of influencing the quorum sensing (QS) system, density determination through detection of diffusible signal molecules, of the plant-pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae (Pss) which controls expression of extracellular polysaccharide production, motility and other factors contributing to virulence to plants. Approximately 11% of the bacterial epiphytes recovered from a variety of plants produced a diffusible factor capable of inhibiting the QS system of Pss as indicated by suppression of ahlI. Blockage of QS by these interfering strains correlated strongly with their ability to limit iron availability to Pss. A direct relationship between the ability of isogenic Escherichia coli strains to sequester iron via their production of different siderophores and their ability to suppress QS in Pss was also observed. Quorum sensing induction was inversely related to iron availability in culture media supplemented with iron chelators or with FeCl(3). Co-inoculation of interfering strains with Pss onto leaves increased the number of resultant disease lesions over twofold compared with that on plants inoculated with Pss alone. Transposon-generated mutants of interfering strains in which QS inhibition was blocked did not increase disease when co-inoculated with Pss. Increased disease incidence was also not observed when a non-motile mutant of Pss was co-inoculated onto plants with QS interfering bacteria suggesting that these strains enhanced the motility of Pss in an iron-dependent manner, leading to an apparent increase in virulence of this pathogen. Considerable cross-talk mediated by iron scavenging apparently occurs on plants, thereby altering the behaviour of bacteria such as Pss that exhibit important QS-dependent traits in this habitat.


Subject(s)
Iron/metabolism , Plant Leaves/microbiology , Pseudomonas syringae , Quorum Sensing/physiology , Oligopeptides/metabolism , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Pseudomonas syringae/genetics , Pseudomonas syringae/pathogenicity , Pseudomonas syringae/physiology , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Siderophores/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology
3.
ISME J ; 6(6): 1166-75, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22170422

ABSTRACT

The bacterial symbiont Verminephrobacter eiseniae colonizes nephridia, the excretory organs, of the lumbricid earthworm Eisenia fetida. E. fetida transfers V. eisenia into the egg capsule albumin during capsule formation and V. eiseniae cells migrate into the earthworm nephridia during embryogenesis, where they bind and persist. In order to characterize the mechanistic basis of selective tissue colonization, methods for site-directed mutagenesis and colonization competence were developed and used to evaluate the consequences of individual gene disruptions. Using these newly developed tools, two distinct modes of bacterial motility were shown to be required for V. eiseniae colonization of nascent earthworm nephridia. Flagella and type IV pili mutants lacked motility in culture and were not able to colonize embryonic earthworms, indicating that both twitching and flagellar motility are required for entrance into the nephridia.


Subject(s)
Comamonadaceae/physiology , Fimbriae, Bacterial/physiology , Flagella/physiology , Oligochaeta/microbiology , Symbiosis , Animals , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Comamonadaceae/genetics , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Fimbriae, Bacterial/genetics , Flagella/genetics , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Oligochaeta/embryology
4.
ISME J ; 3(7): 825-34, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19340082

ABSTRACT

The leaf surface harbors a host of bacterial epiphytes that are capable of influencing the quorum sensing (QS) system of the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae (Pss). Pss uses QS to regulate expression of genes conferring extracellular polysaccharide production, motility and factors contributing to virulence to plants. About 7% of bacterial epiphytes isolated in this study produce the Pss cognate signal, 3-oxohexanoyl-homoserine lactone (3OC6HSL), often in amounts more than 10-fold higher than Pss. Premature induction of QS in Pss by these 3OC6HSL-producing epiphytes suppressed swarming motility and subsequent disease of the leaf. Co-inoculation of 3OC6HSL-producing strains with Pss reduced the number of lesions when inoculated together onto leaves compared with that of plants inoculated with Pss alone. Strains in which 3OC6HSL accumulation was quenched by expression of an N-acyl-homoserine lactonase did not decrease disease when co-inoculated with Pss. Disease incidence caused by a nonmotile mutant of Pss was not affected by 3OC6HSL-producing bacteria, suggesting that exogenous 3OC6HSL signal that altered the motility of Pss was responsible for reducing the apparent virulence of this pathogen. Thus, considerable cross talk involving exogenous 3OC6HSL occurs on leaves and this process can be exploited for disease control.


Subject(s)
4-Butyrolactone/analogs & derivatives , Antibiosis , Plant Diseases/microbiology , Plant Leaves/microbiology , Pseudomonas syringae/drug effects , Pseudomonas syringae/physiology , Quorum Sensing , 4-Butyrolactone/metabolism , Locomotion/drug effects , Pseudomonas syringae/growth & development , Virulence/drug effects
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