After invasion into intercellular spaces of tomato plants, the soil-borne, plant-pathogenic Ralstonia solanacearum strain OE1-1 forms mushroom-shaped biofilms (mushroom-type biofilms, mBFs) on tomato cells, leading to its virulence. The strain OE1-1 produces aryl-furanone secondary metabolites, ralfuranones (A, B, J, K and L), dependent on the quorum sensing (QS) system, with methyl 3-hydroxymyristate (3-OH MAME) synthesized by PhcB as a QS signal. Ralfuranones are associated with the feedback loop of the QS system. A ralfuranone productivity-deficient mutant (ΔralA) exhibited significantly reduced growth in intercellular spaces compared with strain OE1-1, losing its virulence. To analyse the function of ralfuranones in mBF formation by OE1-1 cells, we observed cell aggregates of R. solanacearum strains statically incubated in tomato apoplast fluids on filters under a scanning electron microscope. The ΔralA strain formed significantly fewer microcolonies and mBFs than strain OE1-1. Supplementation of ralfuranones A, B, J and K, but not L, significantly enhanced the development of mBF formation by ΔralA. Furthermore, a phcB- and ralA-deleted mutant (ΔphcB/ralA) exhibited less formation of mBFs than OE1-1, although a QS-deficient, phcB-deleted mutant formed mBFs similar to OE1-1. Supplementation with 3-OH MAME significantly reduced the formation of mBFs by ΔphcB/ralA. The application of each ralfuranone significantly increased the formation of mBFs by ΔphcB/ralA supplied with 3-OH MAME. Together, our findings indicate that ralfuranones are implicated not only in the development of mBFs by strain OE1-1, but also in the suppression of QS-mediated negative regulation of mBF formation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6638155PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mpp.12583DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

strain oe1-1
24
3-oh mame
12
mbf formation
12
formation mbfs
12
oe1-1
9
ralstonia solanacearum
8
solanacearum strain
8
intercellular spaces
8
mbfs strain
8
oe1-1 supplementation
8

Similar Publications

The soilborne Gram-negative phytopathogenic beta-proteobacterium strain OE1-1 produces methyl 3-hydroxymyristate (3-OH MAME) as the quorum sensing (QS) signal by the methyltransferase PhcB and senses the chemical, activating the LysR family transcriptional regulator PhcA, which regulates the QS-dependent genes responsible for QS-dependent phenotypes including virulence. The sensor histidine kinases PhcS and VsrA are reportedly involved in the regulation of QS-dependent genes. To elucidate the function of PhcS and VsrA in the active QS, we generated the deletion and -deletion mutants, which exhibited weak changes to their QS-dependent phenotypes including virulence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The soil-borne phytopathogenic gram-negative bacterium species complex (RSSC) produces staphyloferrin B and micacocidin as siderophores that scavenge for trivalent iron (Fe) in the environment, depending on the intracellular divalent iron (Fe) concentration. The staphyloferrin B-deficient mutant reportedly retains its virulence, but the relationship between micacocidin and virulence remains unconfirmed. To elucidate the effect of micacocidin on RSSC virulence, we generated the micacocidin productivity-deficient mutant (Δ) that lacks , which encodes a putative polyketide synthase/non-ribosomal peptide synthetase, using the RSSC phylotype I strain OE1-1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The gram-negative plant-pathogenic β-proteobacterium Ralstonia pseudosolanacearum strain OE1-1 produces methyl 3-hydroxymyristate as a quorum sensing (QS) signal through methyltransferase PhcB and senses the chemical via the sensor histidine kinase PhcS. This leads to activation of the LysR family transcription regulator PhcA, which regulates the genes (QS-dependent genes) responsible for QS-dependent phenotypes, including virulence. The transcription regulator ChpA, which possesses a response regulator receiver domain and also a hybrid sensor histidine kinase/response regulator phosphore-acceptor domain but lacks a DNA-binding domain, is reportedly involved in QS-dependent biofilm formation and virulence of R.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

After infecting roots of tomato plants, the gram-negative bacterium Ralstonia pseudosolanacearum strain OE1-1 activates quorum sensing (QS) to induce production of plant cell wall-degrading enzymes, such as β-1,4-endoglucanase (Egl) and β-1,4-cellobiohydrolase (CbhA), via the LysR family transcriptional regulator PhcA and then invades xylem vessels to exhibit virulence. The phcA-deletion mutant (ΔphcA) exhibits neither the ability to infect xylem vessels nor virulence. Compared with strain OE1-1, the egl-deletion mutant (Δegl) exhibits lower cellulose degradation activity, lower infectivity in xylem vessels, and reduced virulence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The soil-borne Gram-negative β-proteobacterium Ralstonia solanacearum species complex (RSSC) infects tomato roots through the wounds where secondary roots emerge, infecting xylem vessels. Because it is difficult to observe the behavior of RSSC by a fluorescence-based microscopic approach at high magnification, we have little information on its behavior at the root apexes in tomato roots. To analyze the infection route of a strain of phylotype I of RSSC, R.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!