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The Identification and Conservation of Tunicaminyluracil-Related Biosynthetic Gene Clusters in Several Species Collected From Australia, Africa, Eurasia, and North America. | LitMetric

The Identification and Conservation of Tunicaminyluracil-Related Biosynthetic Gene Clusters in Several Species Collected From Australia, Africa, Eurasia, and North America.

Front Microbiol

Foreign Disease-Weed Science Research Unit, United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service, Frederick, MD, United States.

Published: January 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Tunicaminyluracil antibiotics are toxic glycolipids produced by certain soil-associated bacteria, which can lead to a disease in livestock known as annual ryegrass toxicity, particularly affecting animals in Australia.
  • The involvement of Anguinid seed gall nematodes is crucial as they transmit the bacteria to forage grasses, allowing livestock to ingest tunicaminyluracils that are harmful and can result in high mortality rates.
  • Research indicates that related tunicaminyluracil biosynthetic gene clusters (TGCs) exist in other bacterial species beyond the primary pathogen, showing diversity in gene structure and suggesting that additional sources of livestock poisoning may be present.

Article Abstract

Tunicaminyluracil antibiotics are a novel class of toxigenic glycolipids that are synthesized by several soil-associated . The acquisition of a tunicaminyluracil biosynthetic gene cluster (TGC) in has led to the emergence of the only described, naturally occurring tunicaminyluracil-associated mammalian disease, annual ryegrass toxicity of livestock. Endemic to Australia, is obligately vectored by Anguinid seed gall nematodes to the developing seedheads of forage grasses, in which the bacteria synthesize tunicaminyluracils that may subsequently be consumed by livestock and result in high rates of mortality and morbidity. The potential impact of on U.S. agriculture has led the U.S. Department of Agriculture - Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service to list as a Plant Pathogen Select Agent. is the only characterized phytopathogenic bacterium to produce tunicaminyluracils, but numerous -like livestock poisonings outside Australia suggest additional bacterial sources of tunicaminyluracils may exist. To investigate the conservation of the TGC in and whether the TGC is present in other species, we analyzed genome sequences of members of the genus. Putative TGCs were identified in genome sequences of , , and an undescribed South African species. In the latter three species, the putative TGCs have homologs of tunicaminyluracil-related genes essential for toxin production, but the TGCs differ in gene number and order. The TGCs appear at least partially functional because in contrast to atoxigenic species, TGC-containing species were each able to tolerate exogenous applications of tunicamycin from . The North American TGC shows extensive diversity among the sequenced isolates, with presense/absense polymorphisms in multiple genes or even the whole TGC. TGC structure does not appear to correlate with date or location of isolate collection. The conservation and identification of tunicaminyluracil-related gene clusters in three additional species isolated from South Africa, the Middle East, and the United States, suggests a wider global distribution of potentially neurotoxigenic plant-associated bacteria. This potential for additional endemic and exotic toxigenic species could have widespread and severe implications for agriculture.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6965331PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.02914DOI Listing

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