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1.
Mol Plant Pathol ; 25(1): e13395, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37846613

RESUMEN

Plant-pathogenic Ralstonia strains cause bacterial wilt disease by colonizing xylem vessels of many crops, including tomato. Host resistance is the best control for bacterial wilt, but resistance mechanisms of the widely used Hawaii 7996 tomato breeding line (H7996) are unknown. Using growth in ex vivo xylem sap as a proxy for host xylem, we found that Ralstonia strain GMI1000 grows in sap from both healthy plants and Ralstonia-infected susceptible plants. However, sap from Ralstonia-infected H7996 plants inhibited Ralstonia growth, suggesting that in response to Ralstonia infection, resistant plants increase inhibitors in their xylem sap. Consistent with this, reciprocal grafting and defence gene expression experiments indicated that H7996 wilt resistance acts in both above- and belowground plant parts. Concerningly, H7996 resistance is broken by Ralstonia strain UW551 of the pandemic lineage that threatens highland tropical agriculture. Unlike other Ralstonia, UW551 grew well in sap from Ralstonia-infected H7996 plants. Moreover, other Ralstonia strains could grow in sap from H7996 plants previously infected by UW551. Thus, UW551 overcomes H7996 resistance in part by detoxifying inhibitors in xylem sap. Testing a panel of xylem sap compounds identified by metabolomics revealed that no single chemical differentially inhibits Ralstonia strains that cannot infect H7996. However, sap from Ralstonia-infected H7996 contained more phenolic compounds, which are known to be involved in plant antimicrobial defence. Culturing UW551 in this sap reduced total phenolic levels, indicating that the resistance-breaking Ralstonia strain degrades these chemical defences. Together, these results suggest that H7996 tomato wilt resistance depends in part on inducible phenolic compounds in xylem sap.


Asunto(s)
Ralstonia solanacearum , Solanum lycopersicum , Ralstonia solanacearum/genética , Virulencia , Pandemias , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Xilema/microbiología
2.
mBio ; 14(1): e0318822, 2023 02 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36744950

RESUMEN

Bacterial pathogens in the Ralstonia solanacearum species complex (RSSC) infect the water-transporting xylem vessels of plants, causing bacterial wilt disease. Strains in RSSC phylotypes I and III can reduce nitrate to dinitrogen via complete denitrification. The four-step denitrification pathway enables bacteria to use inorganic nitrogen species as terminal electron acceptors, supporting their growth in oxygen-limited environments such as biofilms or plant xylem. Reduction of nitrate, nitrite, and nitric oxide all contribute to the virulence of a model phylotype I strain. However, little is known about the physiological role of the last denitrification step, the reduction of nitrous oxide to dinitrogen by NosZ. We found that phylotypes I and III need NosZ for full virulence. However, strains in phylotypes II and IV are highly virulent despite lacking NosZ. The ability to respire by reducing nitrate to nitrous oxide does not greatly enhance the growth of phylotype II and IV strains. These partial denitrifying strains reach high cell densities during plant infection and cause typical wilt disease. However, unlike phylotype I and III strains, partial denitrifiers cannot grow well under anaerobic conditions or form thick biofilms in culture or in tomato xylem vessels. Furthermore, aerotaxis assays show that strains from different phylotypes have different oxygen and nitrate preferences. Together, these results indicate that the RSSC contains two subgroups that occupy the same habitat but have evolved divergent energy metabolism strategies to exploit distinct metabolic niches in the xylem. IMPORTANCE Plant-pathogenic Ralstonia spp. are a heterogeneous globally distributed group of bacteria that colonize plant xylem vessels. Ralstonia cells multiply rapidly in plants and obstruct water transport, causing fatal wilting and serious economic losses of many key food security crops. The virulence of these pathogens depends on their ability to grow to high cell densities in the low-oxygen xylem environment. Plant-pathogenic Ralstonia can use denitrifying respiration to generate ATP. The last denitrification step, nitrous oxide reduction by NosZ, contributes to energy production and virulence for only one of the three phytopathogenic Ralstonia species. These complete denitrifiers form thicker biofilms in culture and in tomato xylem, suggesting they are better adapted to hypoxic niches. Strains with partial denitrification physiology form less biofilm and are more often planktonic. They are nonetheless highly virulent. Thus, these closely related bacteria have adapted their core metabolic functions to exploit distinct microniches in the same habitat.


Asunto(s)
Ralstonia solanacearum , Ralstonia , Nitratos/metabolismo , Óxido Nitroso/metabolismo , Xilema/microbiología , Agua/metabolismo , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología
3.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact ; 36(6): 334-344, 2023 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36749297

RESUMEN

Ralstonia solancearum causes bacterial wilt disease on diverse plant hosts. R. solanacearum cells enter a host from soil or infested water through the roots, then multiply and spread in the water-transporting xylem vessels. Despite the low nutrient content of xylem sap, R. solanacearum grows very well inside the host, using denitrification to respire in this hypoxic environment. R. solanacearum growth in planta also depends on the successful deployment of protein effectors into host cells via a type III secretion system (T3SS). The T3SS is absolutely required for R. solanacearum virulence, but it is metabolically costly and can trigger host defenses. Thus, the pathogen's success depends on optimized regulation of the T3SS. We found that a byproduct of denitrification, the toxic free-radical nitric oxide (NO), positively regulates the R. solanacearum T3SS both in vitro and in planta. Using chemical treatments and R. solanacearum mutants with altered NO levels, we show that the expression of a key T3SS regulator, hrpB, is induced by NO in culture. Analyzing the transcriptome of R. solanacearum responding to varying levels of NO both in culture and in planta revealed that the T3SS and effectors were broadly upregulated with increasing levels of NO. This regulation was specific to the T3SS and was not shared by other stressors. Our results suggest that R. solanacearum may experience an NO-rich environment in the plant host and that this NO contributes to the activation of the T3SS during infection. [Formula: see text] Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY 4.0 International license.


Asunto(s)
Ralstonia solanacearum , Solanum lycopersicum , Sistemas de Secreción Tipo III/genética , Sistemas de Secreción Tipo III/metabolismo , Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Óxido Nítrico/metabolismo , Plantas/metabolismo , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología
4.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 89(2): e0156522, 2023 02 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36688670

RESUMEN

Adhesins (adhesive proteins) help bacteria stick to and colonize diverse surfaces and often contribute to virulence. The genome of the bacterial wilt pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum (Rs) encodes dozens of putative adhesins, some of which are upregulated during plant pathogenesis. Little is known about the role of these proteins in bacterial wilt disease. During tomato colonization, three putative Rs adhesin genes were upregulated in a ΔphcA quorum-sensing mutant that cannot respond to high cell densities: radA (Ralstonia adhesin A), rcpA (Ralstonia collagen-like protein A), and rcpB. Based on this differential gene expression, we hypothesized that adhesins repressed by PhcA contribute to early disease stages when Rs experiences a low cell density. During root colonization, Rs upregulated rcpA and rcpB, but not radA, relative to bacteria in the stem at mid-disease. Root attachment assays and confocal microscopy with ΔrcpA/B and ΔradA revealed that all three adhesins help Rs attach to tomato seedling roots. Biofilm assays on abiotic surfaces found that Rs does not require RadA, RcpA, or RcpB for interbacterial attachment (cohesion), but these proteins are essential for anchoring aggregates to a surface (adhesion). However, Rs did not require the adhesins for later disease stages in planta, including colonization of the root endosphere and stems. Interestingly, all three adhesins were essential for full competitive fitness in planta. Together, these infection stage-specific assays identified three proteins that contribute to adhesion and the critical first host-pathogen interaction in bacterial wilt disease. IMPORTANCE Every microbe must balance its need to attach to surfaces with the biological imperative to move and spread. The high-impact plant-pathogenic bacterium Ralstonia solanacearum can stick to biotic and abiotic substrates, presumably using some of the dozens of putative adhesins encoded in its genome. We confirmed the functions and identified the biological roles of multiple afimbrial adhesins. By assaying the competitive fitness and the success of adhesin mutants in three different plant compartments, we identified the specific disease stages and host tissues where three previously cryptic adhesins contribute to success in plants. Combined with tissue-specific regulatory data, this work indicates that R. solanacearum deploys distinct adhesins that help it succeed at different stages of plant pathogenesis.


Asunto(s)
Ralstonia solanacearum , Solanum lycopersicum , Ralstonia solanacearum/genética , Adhesinas Bacterianas/genética , Adhesinas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Virulencia , Factores de Virulencia/genética , Biopelículas , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología
5.
Plant Cell Environ ; 46(10): 3040-3058, 2023 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36213953

RESUMEN

Plant disease limits crop production, and host genetic resistance is a major means of control. Plant pathogenic Ralstonia causes bacterial wilt disease and is best controlled with resistant varieties. Tomato wilt resistance is multigenic, yet the mechanisms of resistance remain largely unknown. We combined metaRNAseq analysis and functional experiments to identify core Ralstonia-responsive genes and the corresponding biological mechanisms in wilt-resistant and wilt-susceptible tomatoes. While trade-offs between growth and defence are common in plants, wilt-resistant plants activated both defence responses and growth processes. Measurements of innate immunity and growth, including reactive oxygen species production and root system growth, respectively, validated that resistant plants executed defence-related processes at the same time they increased root growth. In contrast, in wilt-susceptible plants roots senesced and root surface area declined following Ralstonia inoculation. Wilt-resistant plants repressed genes predicted to negatively regulate water stress tolerance, while susceptible plants repressed genes predicted to promote water stress tolerance. Our results suggest that wilt-resistant plants can simultaneously promote growth and defence by investing in resources that act in both processes. Infected susceptible plants activate defences, but fail to grow and so succumb to Ralstonia, likely because they cannot tolerate the water stress induced by vascular wilt.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades de las Plantas , Solanum lycopersicum , Deshidratación , Genes de Plantas , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Solanum lycopersicum/genética , Solanum lycopersicum/microbiología
6.
Microbiol Spectr ; 10(6): e0227022, 2022 12 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36453936

RESUMEN

Plant-pathogenic bacteria in the Ralstonia solanacearum species complex (RSSC) cause highly destructive bacterial wilt disease of diverse crops. Wilt disease prevention and management is difficult because RSSC persists in soil, water, and plant material. Growers need practical methods to kill these pathogens in irrigation water, a common source of disease outbreaks. Additionally, the R. solanacearum race 3 biovar 2 (R3bv2) subgroup is a quarantine pest in many countries and a highly regulated select agent pathogen in the United States. Plant protection officials and researchers need validated protocols to eradicate R3bv2 for regulatory compliance. To meet these needs, we measured the survival of four R3bv2 and three phylotype I RSSC strains following treatment with hydrogen peroxide, stabilized hydrogen peroxide (Huwa-San), active chlorine, heat, UV radiation, and desiccation. No surviving RSSC cells were detected after cultured bacteria were exposed for 10 min to 400 ppm hydrogen peroxide, 50 ppm Huwa-San, 50 ppm active chlorine, or temperatures above 50°C. RSSC cells on agar plates were eradicated by 30 s of UV irradiation and killed by desiccation on most biotic and all abiotic surfaces tested. RSSC bacteria did not survive the cell lysis steps of four nucleic acid extraction protocols. However, bacteria in planta were more difficult to kill. Stems of infected tomato plants contained a subpopulation of bacteria with increased tolerance of heat and UV light, but not oxidative stress. This result has significant management implications. We demonstrate the utility of these protocols for compliance with select agent research regulations and for management of a bacterial wilt outbreak in the field. IMPORTANCE Bacteria in the Ralstonia solanacearum species complex (RSSC) are globally distributed and cause destructive vascular wilt diseases of many high-value crops. These aggressive pathogens spread in diseased plant material and via contaminated soil, tools, and irrigation water. A subgroup of the RSSC, race 3 biovar 2, is a European and Canadian quarantine pathogen and a U.S. select agent subject to stringent and constantly evolving regulations intended to prevent pathogen introduction or release. We validated eradication and inactivation methods that can be used by (i) growers seeking to disinfest water and manage bacterial wilt disease outbreaks, (ii) researchers who must remain in compliance with regulations, and (iii) regulators who are expected to define containment practices. Relevant to all these stakeholders, we show that while cultured RSSC cells are sensitive to relatively low levels of oxidative chemicals, desiccation, and heat, more aggressive treatment, such as autoclaving or incineration, is required to eradicate plant-pathogenic Ralstonia growing inside plant material.


Asunto(s)
Ralstonia solanacearum , Ralstonia , Cloro , Peróxido de Hidrógeno , Canadá , Ralstonia solanacearum/fisiología , Enfermedades de las Plantas/prevención & control , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología
7.
mBio ; 13(6): e0147522, 2022 12 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36314808

RESUMEN

Bacteriophages put intense selective pressure on microbes, which must evolve diverse resistance mechanisms to survive continuous phage attacks. We used a library of spontaneous Bacteriophage Insensitive Mutants (BIMs) to learn how the plant pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum resists the virulent lytic podophage phiAP1. Phenotypic and genetic characterization of many BIMs suggested that the R. solanacearum Type II Secretion System (T2SS) plays a key role in phiAP1 infection. Using precision engineered mutations that permit T2SS assembly but either inactivate the T2SS GspE ATPase or sterically block the secretion portal, we demonstrated that phiAP1 needs a functional T2SS to infect R. solanacearum. This distinction between the static presence of T2SS components, which is necessary but not sufficient for phage sensitivity, and the energized and functional T2SS, which is sufficient, implies that binding interactions alone cannot explain the role of the T2SS in phiAP1 infection. Rather, our results imply that some aspect of the resetting of the T2SS, such as disassembly of the pseudopilus, is required. Because R. solanacearum secretes multiple virulence factors via the T2SS, acquiring resistance to phiAP1 also dramatically reduced R. solanacearum virulence on tomato plants. This acute fitness trade-off suggests this group of phages may be a sustainable control strategy for an important crop disease. IMPORTANCE Ralstonia solanacearum is a destructive plant pathogen that causes lethal bacterial wilt disease in hundreds of diverse plant hosts, including many economically important crops. Phages that kill R. solanacearum could offer effective and environmentally friendly wilt disease control, but only if the bacterium cannot easily evolve resistance. Encouragingly, most R. solanacearum mutants resistant to the virulent lytic phage phiAP1 no longer secreted multiple virulence factors and had much reduced fitness and virulence on tomato plants. Further analysis revealed that phage phiAP1 needs a functional type II secretion system to infect R. solanacearum, suggesting this podophage uses a novel infection mechanism.


Asunto(s)
Bacteriófagos , Ralstonia solanacearum , Solanum lycopersicum , Sistemas de Secreción Tipo II , Factores de Virulencia/genética , Ralstonia solanacearum/genética , Bacteriófagos/genética , Sistemas de Secreción Tipo II/metabolismo , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología
8.
Microbiol Spectr ; 10(2): e0026422, 2022 04 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35377234

RESUMEN

Ralstonia solanacearum, which causes bacterial wilt disease of many crops, requires denitrifying respiration to survive in its plant host. In the hypoxic environment of plant xylem vessels, this pathogen confronts toxic oxidative radicals like nitric oxide (NO), which is generated by both bacterial denitrification and host defenses. R. solanacearum has multiple distinct mechanisms that could mitigate this stress, including putative NO-binding protein (NorA), nitric oxide reductase (NorB), and flavohaemoglobin (HmpX). During denitrification and tomato pathogenesis and in response to exogenous NO, R. solanacearum upregulated norA, norB, and hmpX. Single mutants lacking ΔnorB, ΔnorA, or ΔhmpX increased expression of many iron and sulfur metabolism genes, suggesting that the loss of even one NO detoxification system demands metabolic compensation. Single mutants suffered only moderate fitness reductions in host plants, possibly because they upregulated their remaining protective genes. However, ΔnorA/norB, ΔnorB/hmpX, and ΔnorA/hmpX double mutants grew poorly in denitrifying culture and in planta. It is likely that the loss of norA, norB, and hmpX is lethal, since the methods used to construct the double mutants could not generate a triple mutant. Functional aconitase activity assays showed that NorA, HmpX, and especially NorB are important for maintaining iron-sulfur cluster proteins. Additionally, plant defense genes were upregulated in tomatoes infected with the NO-overproducing ΔnorB mutant, suggesting that bacterial detoxification of NO reduces the ability of the plant host to perceive the presence of the pathogen. Thus, R. solanacearum's three NO detoxification systems each contribute to and are collectively essential for overcoming metabolic nitrosative stress during denitrification, for virulence and growth in the tomato, and for evading host plant defenses. IMPORTANCE The soilborne plant pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum (Rs) causes bacterial wilt, a serious and widespread threat to global food security. Rs is metabolically adapted to low-oxygen conditions, using denitrifying respiration to survive in the host and cause disease. However, bacterial denitrification and host defenses generate nitric oxide (NO), which is toxic and also alters signaling pathways in both the pathogen and its plant hosts. Rs mitigates NO with a trio of mechanistically distinct proteins: NO-reductase (NorB), predicted iron-binding (NorA), and oxidoreductase (HmpX). This redundancy, together with analysis of mutants and in-planta dual transcriptomes, indicates that maintaining low NO levels is integral to Rs fitness in tomatoes (because NO damages iron-cluster proteins) and to evading host recognition (because bacterially produced NO can trigger plant defenses).


Asunto(s)
Ralstonia solanacearum , Solanum lycopersicum , Desnitrificación , Hierro/metabolismo , Hierro/toxicidad , Solanum lycopersicum/metabolismo , Solanum lycopersicum/microbiología , Óxido Nítrico/metabolismo , Oxidorreductasas/metabolismo , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Plantas/metabolismo , Ralstonia solanacearum/genética , Azufre/metabolismo
9.
PLoS One ; 17(4): e0266254, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35476629

RESUMEN

Ralstonia solanacearum causes bacterial wilt disease, leading to severe crop losses. Xylem sap from R. solanacearum-infected tomato is enriched in the disaccharide trehalose. Water-stressed plants also accumulate trehalose, which increases drought tolerance via abscisic acid (ABA) signaling. Because R. solanacearum-infected plants suffer reduced water flow, we hypothesized that bacterial wilt physiologically mimics drought stress, which trehalose could mitigate. We found that R. solanacearum-infected plants differentially expressed drought-associated genes, including those involved in ABA and trehalose metabolism, and had more ABA in xylem sap. Consistent with this, treating tomato roots with ABA reduced both stomatal conductance and stem colonization by R. solanacearum. Treating roots with trehalose increased xylem sap ABA and reduced plant water use by lowering stomatal conductance and temporarily improving water use efficiency. Trehalose treatment also upregulated expression of salicylic acid (SA)-dependent tomato defense genes; increased xylem sap levels of SA and other antimicrobial compounds; and increased bacterial wilt resistance of SA-insensitive NahG tomato plants. Additionally, trehalose treatment increased xylem concentrations of jasmonic acid and related oxylipins. Finally, trehalose-treated plants were substantially more resistant to bacterial wilt disease. Together, these data show that exogenous trehalose reduced both water stress and bacterial wilt disease and triggered systemic disease resistance, possibly through a Damage Associated Molecular Pattern (DAMP) response pathway. This suite of responses revealed unexpected linkages between plant responses to biotic and abiotic stress and suggested that R. solanacearum-infected plants increase trehalose to improve water use efficiency and increase wilt disease resistance. The pathogen may degrade trehalose to counter these efforts. Together, these results suggest that treating tomatoes with exogenous trehalose could be a practical strategy for bacterial wilt management.


Asunto(s)
Solanum lycopersicum , Resistencia a la Enfermedad , Sequías , Solanum lycopersicum/microbiología , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Ácido Salicílico/metabolismo , Trehalosa/metabolismo
11.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact ; 34(10): 1212-1215, 2021 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34232701

RESUMEN

We share whole genome sequences of six strains from the Ralstonia solanacearum species complex, a diverse group of Betaproteobacteria that cause plant vascular wilt diseases. Using single-molecule real-time technology, we sequenced and assembled full genomes of Rs5 and UW700, two phylotype IA-sequevar 7 (IIA-7) strains from the southeastern United States that are closely related to the R. solanacearum species type strain, K60, but were isolated >50 years later. Four sequenced strains from Africa include a soil isolate from Nigeria (UW386, III-23), a tomato isolate from Senegal (UW763, I-14), and two potato isolates from the Madagascar highlands (RUN2474, III-19 and RUN2279, III-60). This resource will support studies of the genetic diversity, ecology, virulence, and microevolution of this globally distributed group of high-impact plant pathogens.[Formula: see text] Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.


Asunto(s)
Ralstonia solanacearum , Solanum lycopersicum , Solanum tuberosum , Filogenia , Enfermedades de las Plantas , Ralstonia , Ralstonia solanacearum/genética
12.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact ; 34(6): 669-679, 2021 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33487004

RESUMEN

The soilborne pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum causes a lethal bacterial wilt disease of tomato and many other crops by infecting host roots, then colonizing the water-transporting xylem vessels. Tomato xylem sap is nutritionally limiting but it does contain some carbon sources, including sucrose, trehalose, and myo-inositol. Transcriptomic analyses revealed that R. solanacearum expresses distinct catabolic pathways at low cell density (LCD) and high cell density (HCD). To investigate the links between bacterial catabolism, infection stage, and virulence, we measured in planta fitness of bacterial mutants lacking specific carbon catabolic pathways expressed at either LCD or HCD. We hypothesized that early in disease, during root infection, the bacterium depends on carbon sources catabolized at LCD, while HCD carbon sources are only required later in disease during stem colonization. A R. solanacearum ΔiolG mutant unable to use the LCD-catabolized nutrient myo-inositol was defective in tomato root colonization, but after it reached the stem this strain colonized and caused symptoms as well as wild type. In contrast, R. solanacearum mutants unable to use the HCD-catabolized nutrients sucrose (ΔscrA), trehalose (ΔtreA), or both (ΔscrA/treA), infected roots as well as wild-type R. solanacearum but were defective in colonization and competitive fitness in midstems and had reduced virulence. Further, xylem sap from tomato plants colonized by ΔscrA, ΔtreA, or ΔscrA/treA R. solanacearum mutants contained twice as much sucrose as sap from plants colonized by wild-type R. solanacearum. Together, these findings suggest that quorum sensing specifically adapts R. solanacearum metabolism for success in the different nutritional environments of plant roots and xylem sap.[Formula: see text] Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.


Asunto(s)
Ralstonia solanacearum , Solanum lycopersicum , Inositol , Enfermedades de las Plantas , Ralstonia solanacearum/genética , Sacarosa , Trehalosa , Virulencia
13.
Plant Dis ; 105(1): 207-208, 2021 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33175669

RESUMEN

Ralstonia solanacearum phylotype II sequevar 1 (RsII-1, formerly race 3 biovar 2) causes tomato bacterial wilt, potato brown rot, and Southern wilt of geranium. Strains in RsII-1 cause wilting in potato and tomato at cooler temperatures than tropical lowland R. solanacearum strains. Although periodically introduced, RsII-1 has not established in the United States. This pathogen is of quarantine concern and listed as a Federal Select Agent. We report a rapidly sequenced (<2 days) draft genome of UW848, a RsII-1 isolate introduced to the United States in geranium cuttings in spring 2020. UW848 belongs to the near-clonal cluster of RsII-1 global pandemic strains.


Asunto(s)
Geranium , Ralstonia solanacearum , Solanum lycopersicum , Solanum tuberosum , Geranium/genética , Enfermedades de las Plantas , Ralstonia solanacearum/genética , Estados Unidos
14.
Sci Adv ; 6(46)2020 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33188025

RESUMEN

Vascular plant pathogens travel long distances through host veins, leading to life-threatening, systemic infections. In contrast, nonvascular pathogens remain restricted to infection sites, triggering localized symptom development. The contrasting features of vascular and nonvascular diseases suggest distinct etiologies, but the basis for each remains unclear. Here, we show that the hydrolase CbsA acts as a phenotypic switch between vascular and nonvascular plant pathogenesis. cbsA was enriched in genomes of vascular phytopathogenic bacteria in the family Xanthomonadaceae and absent in most nonvascular species. CbsA expression allowed nonvascular Xanthomonas to cause vascular blight, while cbsA mutagenesis resulted in reduction of vascular or enhanced nonvascular symptom development. Phylogenetic hypothesis testing further revealed that cbsA was lost in multiple nonvascular lineages and more recently gained by some vascular subgroups, suggesting that vascular pathogenesis is ancestral. Our results overall demonstrate how the gain and loss of single loci can facilitate the evolution of complex ecological traits.


Asunto(s)
Xanthomonas , Bacterias , Hidrolasas , Filogenia , Plantas/genética , Xanthomonas/genética
15.
Plant Dis ; 2020 Sep 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32945739

RESUMEN

Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), pepper (Capsicum annum), and gboma (Solanum macrocarpon) are major vegetables in Togo, with many people depending on these crops for their livelihood. In December 2018, during the dry season with temperatures between 21°C to 35°C, tomato ('Petomech'), pepper ('Gboyebesse') and gboma (local landrace) showing wilt symptoms without foliar yellowing were collected from two locations, Tchouloum and CECO-AGRO sites in the Sotouboua Prefecture of Togo, ~300 km from the capital city of Lome. Disease incidence ranged between 10% to 50% in multiple fields. Cut stems of most wilting tomato, pepper and gboma plants produced bacterial ooze in water and vascular discoloration was visible in longitudinal stem sections. Ground cut stem tissue tested positive with Rs ImmunoStrips specific to the Ralstonia solanacearum species complex (RSSC) (Agdia Inc., Elkhart, IN, USA). Collected samples were stored at ambient temperature and cultured within 36 hr. Culturing sap from cut stems plated on modified SMSA medium (Engelbrecht 1994) yielded colonies with typical RSSC morphology: slow-growing, irregular, mucoid, and white with red centers. Genomic DNA was extracted from thirteen isolates: two from gboma, five from tomato and six from pepper. The expected 280-bp band was amplified from all 13 genomic DNAs following polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using the 759/760 RSSC-specific primer pair (Opina et al. 1997). PCR with the 630/631 primers, which identify the Race 3 biovar 2 RSSC subgroup, did not yield a product from any Togo isolate (Opina et al. 1997). The phylotype multiplex PCR identified all Togo isolates as belonging to the phylotype I subgroup, also called R. pseudosolanacearum (Prior et al. 2016; Fegan and Prior 2005). Phylotype control DNAs were from strains GMI1000 (phylotype I, Asia), K60 (phylotype II, Americas), CMR15 (phylotype III, Africa), and PSI07 (phylotype IV, Indondesia). Comparative genomic analysis of the partial endoglucanase (egl) gene, amplified with the Endo primer pairs (Poussier et al. 2000), revealed all Togo strains belonged to sequevar 17, a group known to cause bacterial wilt of peanut in China. (Xu et al. 2009). The egl sequences are in NCBI GenBank accessions MT572393 to MT572405. Koch's postulates were completed by inoculating 28-day-old bacterial wilt-susceptible 'Bonny Best' tomato plants by soil soak (Khokhani et al. 2018). Briefly, soil around each unwounded plant was drenched with 50 ml of a 108 CFU/mL suspension of bacteria grown from a single colony. Five plants were inoculated with each of four randomly selected Togo strains. RSSC phylotype I strain GMI1000 served as a positive control and water treated plants as negative controls. Plants were kept in a 28°C growth chamber with a 12 hr photoperiod. All RSSC inoculated plants were fully wilted within a week; symptoms resembled to those observed in the field. Water treated control plants did not wilt. Culturing sap from all inoculated plants on SMSA medium yielded colonies with typical RSSC morphology that tested positive with the Rs ImmunoStrips. This is the first identification of RSSC in Togo. These results will guide development of disease management strategies and regionally appropriate breeding of vegetable lines with resistance to the phylotype I RSSC strains present in Togo.

16.
Front Plant Sci ; 11: 463, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32391034

RESUMEN

Xanthomonas species, Pseudomonas syringae and Ralstonia species are bacterial plant pathogens that cause significant yield loss in many crop species. Generating disease-resistant crop varieties can provide a more sustainable solution to control yield loss compared to chemical methods. Plant immune receptors encoded by nucleotide-binding, leucine-rich repeat (NLR) genes typically confer resistance to pathogens that produce a cognate elicitor, often an effector protein secreted by the pathogen to promote virulence. The diverse sequence and presence/absence variation of pathogen effector proteins within and between pathogen species usually limits the utility of a single NLR gene to protecting a plant from a single pathogen species or particular strains. The NLR protein Recognition of XopQ 1 (Roq1) was recently identified from the plant Nicotiana benthamiana and mediates perception of the effector proteins XopQ and HopQ1 from Xanthomonas and P. syringae respectively. Unlike most recognized effectors, alleles of XopQ/HopQ1 are highly conserved and present in most plant pathogenic strains of Xanthomonas and P. syringae. A homolog of XopQ/HopQ1, named RipB, is present in most Ralstonia strains. We found that Roq1 confers immunity to Xanthomonas, P. syringae, and Ralstonia when expressed in tomato. Strong resistance to Xanthomonas perforans was observed in three seasons of field trials with both natural and artificial inoculation. The Roq1 gene can therefore be used to provide safe, economical, and effective control of these pathogens in tomato and other crop species and reduce or eliminate the need for traditional chemical controls.

17.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact ; 33(3): 462-473, 2020 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31765286

RESUMEN

The xylem-dwelling plant pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum changes the chemical composition of host xylem sap during bacterial wilt disease. The disaccharide trehalose, implicated in stress tolerance across all kingdoms of life, is enriched in sap from R. solanacearum-infected tomato plants. Trehalose in xylem sap could be synthesized by the bacterium, the plant, or both. To investigate the source and role of trehalose metabolism during wilt disease, we evaluated the effects of deleting the three trehalose synthesis pathways in the pathogen: TreYZ, TreS, and OtsAB, as well as its sole trehalase, TreA. A quadruple treY/treS/otsA/treA mutant produced 30-fold less intracellular trehalose than the wild-type strain missing the trehalase enzyme. This trehalose-nonproducing mutant had reduced tolerance to osmotic stress, which the bacterium likely experiences in plant xylem vessels. Following naturalistic soil-soak inoculation of tomato plants, this triple mutant did not cause disease as well as wild-type R. solanacearum. Further, the wild-type strain out-competed the trehalose-nonproducing mutant by over 600-fold when tomato plants were coinoculated with both strains, showing that trehalose biosynthesis helps R. solanacearum overcome environmental stresses during infection. An otsA (trehalose-6-phosphate synthase) single mutant behaved similarly to ΔtreY/treS/otsA in all experimental settings, suggesting that the OtsAB pathway is the dominant trehalose synthesis pathway in R. solanacearum.


Asunto(s)
Presión Osmótica , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Ralstonia solanacearum/patogenicidad , Solanum lycopersicum/fisiología , Trehalosa/biosíntesis , Eliminación de Gen , Genes Bacterianos , Solanum lycopersicum/microbiología , Ralstonia solanacearum/genética , Estrés Fisiológico , Virulencia , Factores de Virulencia , Xilema/microbiología
18.
Cell Host Microbe ; 26(5): 638-649.e5, 2019 Nov 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31628081

RESUMEN

Pathogenic bacteria inject effector proteins into host cells to manipulate cellular processes and facilitate the infection. Transcription-activator-like effectors (TALEs), an effector class in plant pathogenic bacteria, transcriptionally activate host genes to promote disease. We identify arginine decarboxylase (ADC) genes as the host targets of Brg11, a TALE-like effector from the plant pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum. Brg11 targets a 17-bp sequence that was found to be part of a conserved 50-bp motif, termed the ADC-box, upstream of ADC genes involved in polyamine biosynthesis. The transcribed ADC-box attenuates translation from native ADC mRNAs; however, Brg11 induces truncated ADC mRNAs lacking the ADC-box, thus bypassing this translational control. As a result, Brg11 induces elevated polyamine levels that trigger a defense reaction and likely inhibits bacterial niche competitors but not R. solanacearum. Our findings suggest that Brg11 may give R. solanacearum a competitive advantage and uncover a role for bacterial effectors in regulating ternary microbe-host-microbe interactions.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Carboxiliasas/metabolismo , Poliaminas/metabolismo , Ralstonia solanacearum/metabolismo , Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Carboxiliasas/genética , Interacciones Microbiota-Huesped/genética , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Hojas de la Planta/metabolismo , Raíces de Plantas/metabolismo , Plantas/microbiología , Biosíntesis de Proteínas/genética , Ralstonia solanacearum/genética
19.
Trends Microbiol ; 26(11): 929-942, 2018 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29941188

RESUMEN

The plant wilt pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum thrives in the water-transporting xylem vessels of its host plants. Xylem is a relatively nutrient-poor, high-flow environment but R. solanacearum succeeds there by tuning its own metabolism and altering xylem sap biochemistry. Flow influences many traits that the bacterium requires for pathogenesis. Most notably, a quorum sensing system mediates the pathogen's major transition from a rapidly dividing early phase that voraciously consumes diverse food sources and avidly adheres to plant surfaces to a slower-growing late phase that can use fewer nutrients but produces virulence factors and disperses effectively. This review discusses recent findings about R. solanacearum pathogenesis in the context of its flowing in planta niche, with emphasis on R. solanacearum metabolism in plants.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Plantas/microbiología , Ralstonia solanacearum/metabolismo , Ralstonia solanacearum/patogenicidad , Xilema/microbiología , Adhesinas Bacterianas , Biopelículas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Pared Celular , Metabolómica , Nutrientes , Fenotipo , Percepción de Quorum , Ralstonia solanacearum/crecimiento & desarrollo , Sistemas de Secreción Tipo III , Factores de Virulencia/metabolismo , Xilema/química , Xilema/citología
20.
Bio Protoc ; 8(18): e3028, 2018 Sep 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34395814

RESUMEN

Virulence assays are powerful tools to study microbial pathogenesis in vivo. Good assays track disease development and, coupled with targeted mutagenesis, can identify pathogen virulence factors. Disease development in plants is extremely sensitive to environmental factors such as temperature, atmospheric humidity, and soil water level, so it can be challenging to standardize conditions to achieve consistent results. Here, we present optimized and validated experimental conditions and analysis methods for nine assays that measure specific aspects of virulence in the phytopathogenic bacterium Ralstonia solanacearum, using tomato as the model host plant.

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