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The genome of a steinernematid-associated Pseudomonas piscis bacterium encodes the biosynthesis of insect toxins

Several species of soil-dwelling Steinernema nematodes are used in the biocontrol of crop pests, due to their natural capacity to kill diverse lepidopteran species. Although this insect-killing trait is known to be augmented by the nematodes’ Xenorhabdus endosymbionts, the role of other steinernemat...

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Autores principales: Awori, Ryan Musumba, Hendre, Prasad, Amugune, Nelson O.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Microbiology Society 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10634486/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37970093
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/acmi.0.000659.v3
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author Awori, Ryan Musumba
Hendre, Prasad
Amugune, Nelson O.
author_facet Awori, Ryan Musumba
Hendre, Prasad
Amugune, Nelson O.
author_sort Awori, Ryan Musumba
collection PubMed
description Several species of soil-dwelling Steinernema nematodes are used in the biocontrol of crop pests, due to their natural capacity to kill diverse lepidopteran species. Although this insect-killing trait is known to be augmented by the nematodes’ Xenorhabdus endosymbionts, the role of other steinernematid-associated bacterial genera in the nematode lifecycle remains unclear. This genomic study aimed to determine the potential of Pseudomonas piscis to contribute to the entomopathogenicity of its Steinernema host. Insect larvae were infected with three separate Steinernema cultures. From each of the three treatments, the prevalent bacteria in the haemocoel of cadavers, four days post-infection, were isolated. These three bacterial isolates were morphologically characterised. DNA was extracted from each of the three bacterial isolates and used for long-read genome sequencing and assembly. Assemblies were used to delineate species and identify genes that encode insect toxins, antimicrobials, and confer antibiotic resistance. We assembled three complete genomes. Through digital DNA–DNA hybridisation analyses, we ascertained that the haemocoels of insect cadavers previously infected with Steinernema sp. Kalro, Steinernema sp. 75, and Steinernema sp. 97 were dominated by Xenorhabdus griffiniae Kalro, Pseudomonas piscis 75, and X. griffiniae 97, respectively. X. griffiniae Kalro and X. griffiniae 97 formed a subspecies with other X. griffiniae symbionts of steinernematids from Kenya. P. piscis 75 phylogenetically clustered with pseudomonads that are characterised by high insecticidal activity. The P. piscis 75 genome encoded the production pathway of insect toxins such as orfamides and rhizoxins, antifungals such as pyrrolnitrin and pyoluteorin, and the broad-spectrum antimicrobial 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol. The P. piscis 75 genome encoded resistance to over ten classes of antibiotics, including cationic lipopeptides. Steinernematid-associated P. piscis bacteria hence have the biosynthetic potential to contribute to nematode entomopathogenicity.
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spelling pubmed-106344862023-11-15 The genome of a steinernematid-associated Pseudomonas piscis bacterium encodes the biosynthesis of insect toxins Awori, Ryan Musumba Hendre, Prasad Amugune, Nelson O. Access Microbiol Research Articles Several species of soil-dwelling Steinernema nematodes are used in the biocontrol of crop pests, due to their natural capacity to kill diverse lepidopteran species. Although this insect-killing trait is known to be augmented by the nematodes’ Xenorhabdus endosymbionts, the role of other steinernematid-associated bacterial genera in the nematode lifecycle remains unclear. This genomic study aimed to determine the potential of Pseudomonas piscis to contribute to the entomopathogenicity of its Steinernema host. Insect larvae were infected with three separate Steinernema cultures. From each of the three treatments, the prevalent bacteria in the haemocoel of cadavers, four days post-infection, were isolated. These three bacterial isolates were morphologically characterised. DNA was extracted from each of the three bacterial isolates and used for long-read genome sequencing and assembly. Assemblies were used to delineate species and identify genes that encode insect toxins, antimicrobials, and confer antibiotic resistance. We assembled three complete genomes. Through digital DNA–DNA hybridisation analyses, we ascertained that the haemocoels of insect cadavers previously infected with Steinernema sp. Kalro, Steinernema sp. 75, and Steinernema sp. 97 were dominated by Xenorhabdus griffiniae Kalro, Pseudomonas piscis 75, and X. griffiniae 97, respectively. X. griffiniae Kalro and X. griffiniae 97 formed a subspecies with other X. griffiniae symbionts of steinernematids from Kenya. P. piscis 75 phylogenetically clustered with pseudomonads that are characterised by high insecticidal activity. The P. piscis 75 genome encoded the production pathway of insect toxins such as orfamides and rhizoxins, antifungals such as pyrrolnitrin and pyoluteorin, and the broad-spectrum antimicrobial 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol. The P. piscis 75 genome encoded resistance to over ten classes of antibiotics, including cationic lipopeptides. Steinernematid-associated P. piscis bacteria hence have the biosynthetic potential to contribute to nematode entomopathogenicity. Microbiology Society 2023-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10634486/ /pubmed/37970093 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/acmi.0.000659.v3 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Awori, Ryan Musumba
Hendre, Prasad
Amugune, Nelson O.
The genome of a steinernematid-associated Pseudomonas piscis bacterium encodes the biosynthesis of insect toxins
title The genome of a steinernematid-associated Pseudomonas piscis bacterium encodes the biosynthesis of insect toxins
title_full The genome of a steinernematid-associated Pseudomonas piscis bacterium encodes the biosynthesis of insect toxins
title_fullStr The genome of a steinernematid-associated Pseudomonas piscis bacterium encodes the biosynthesis of insect toxins
title_full_unstemmed The genome of a steinernematid-associated Pseudomonas piscis bacterium encodes the biosynthesis of insect toxins
title_short The genome of a steinernematid-associated Pseudomonas piscis bacterium encodes the biosynthesis of insect toxins
title_sort genome of a steinernematid-associated pseudomonas piscis bacterium encodes the biosynthesis of insect toxins
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10634486/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37970093
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/acmi.0.000659.v3
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