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Acquisition and Evolution of Plant Pathogenesis–Associated Gene Clusters and Candidate Determinants of Tissue-Specificity in Xanthomonas

BACKGROUND: Xanthomonas is a large genus of plant-associated and plant-pathogenic bacteria. Collectively, members cause diseases on over 392 plant species. Individually, they exhibit marked host- and tissue-specificity. The determinants of this specificity are unknown. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS...

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Autores principales: Lu, Hong, Patil, Prabhu, Van Sluys, Marie-Anne, White, Frank F., Ryan, Robert P., Dow, J. Maxwell, Rabinowicz, Pablo, Salzberg, Steven L., Leach, Jan E., Sonti, Ramesh, Brendel, Volker, Bogdanove, Adam J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2585010/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19043590
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0003828
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author Lu, Hong
Patil, Prabhu
Van Sluys, Marie-Anne
White, Frank F.
Ryan, Robert P.
Dow, J. Maxwell
Rabinowicz, Pablo
Salzberg, Steven L.
Leach, Jan E.
Sonti, Ramesh
Brendel, Volker
Bogdanove, Adam J.
author_facet Lu, Hong
Patil, Prabhu
Van Sluys, Marie-Anne
White, Frank F.
Ryan, Robert P.
Dow, J. Maxwell
Rabinowicz, Pablo
Salzberg, Steven L.
Leach, Jan E.
Sonti, Ramesh
Brendel, Volker
Bogdanove, Adam J.
author_sort Lu, Hong
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Xanthomonas is a large genus of plant-associated and plant-pathogenic bacteria. Collectively, members cause diseases on over 392 plant species. Individually, they exhibit marked host- and tissue-specificity. The determinants of this specificity are unknown. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: To assess potential contributions to host- and tissue-specificity, pathogenesis-associated gene clusters were compared across genomes of eight Xanthomonas strains representing vascular or non-vascular pathogens of rice, brassicas, pepper and tomato, and citrus. The gum cluster for extracellular polysaccharide is conserved except for gumN and sequences downstream. The xcs and xps clusters for type II secretion are conserved, except in the rice pathogens, in which xcs is missing. In the otherwise conserved hrp cluster, sequences flanking the core genes for type III secretion vary with respect to insertion sequence element and putative effector gene content. Variation at the rpf (regulation of pathogenicity factors) cluster is more pronounced, though genes with established functional relevance are conserved. A cluster for synthesis of lipopolysaccharide varies highly, suggesting multiple horizontal gene transfers and reassortments, but this variation does not correlate with host- or tissue-specificity. Phylogenetic trees based on amino acid alignments of gum, xps, xcs, hrp, and rpf cluster products generally reflect strain phylogeny. However, amino acid residues at four positions correlate with tissue specificity, revealing hpaA and xpsD as candidate determinants. Examination of genome sequences of xanthomonads Xylella fastidiosa and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia revealed that the hrp, gum, and xcs clusters are recent acquisitions in the Xanthomonas lineage. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results provide insight into the ancestral Xanthomonas genome and indicate that differentiation with respect to host- and tissue-specificity involved not major modifications or wholesale exchange of clusters, but subtle changes in a small number of genes or in non-coding sequences, and/or differences outside the clusters, potentially among regulatory targets or secretory substrates.
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spelling pubmed-25850102008-11-27 Acquisition and Evolution of Plant Pathogenesis–Associated Gene Clusters and Candidate Determinants of Tissue-Specificity in Xanthomonas Lu, Hong Patil, Prabhu Van Sluys, Marie-Anne White, Frank F. Ryan, Robert P. Dow, J. Maxwell Rabinowicz, Pablo Salzberg, Steven L. Leach, Jan E. Sonti, Ramesh Brendel, Volker Bogdanove, Adam J. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Xanthomonas is a large genus of plant-associated and plant-pathogenic bacteria. Collectively, members cause diseases on over 392 plant species. Individually, they exhibit marked host- and tissue-specificity. The determinants of this specificity are unknown. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: To assess potential contributions to host- and tissue-specificity, pathogenesis-associated gene clusters were compared across genomes of eight Xanthomonas strains representing vascular or non-vascular pathogens of rice, brassicas, pepper and tomato, and citrus. The gum cluster for extracellular polysaccharide is conserved except for gumN and sequences downstream. The xcs and xps clusters for type II secretion are conserved, except in the rice pathogens, in which xcs is missing. In the otherwise conserved hrp cluster, sequences flanking the core genes for type III secretion vary with respect to insertion sequence element and putative effector gene content. Variation at the rpf (regulation of pathogenicity factors) cluster is more pronounced, though genes with established functional relevance are conserved. A cluster for synthesis of lipopolysaccharide varies highly, suggesting multiple horizontal gene transfers and reassortments, but this variation does not correlate with host- or tissue-specificity. Phylogenetic trees based on amino acid alignments of gum, xps, xcs, hrp, and rpf cluster products generally reflect strain phylogeny. However, amino acid residues at four positions correlate with tissue specificity, revealing hpaA and xpsD as candidate determinants. Examination of genome sequences of xanthomonads Xylella fastidiosa and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia revealed that the hrp, gum, and xcs clusters are recent acquisitions in the Xanthomonas lineage. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results provide insight into the ancestral Xanthomonas genome and indicate that differentiation with respect to host- and tissue-specificity involved not major modifications or wholesale exchange of clusters, but subtle changes in a small number of genes or in non-coding sequences, and/or differences outside the clusters, potentially among regulatory targets or secretory substrates. Public Library of Science 2008-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2585010/ /pubmed/19043590 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0003828 Text en Lu et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lu, Hong
Patil, Prabhu
Van Sluys, Marie-Anne
White, Frank F.
Ryan, Robert P.
Dow, J. Maxwell
Rabinowicz, Pablo
Salzberg, Steven L.
Leach, Jan E.
Sonti, Ramesh
Brendel, Volker
Bogdanove, Adam J.
Acquisition and Evolution of Plant Pathogenesis–Associated Gene Clusters and Candidate Determinants of Tissue-Specificity in Xanthomonas
title Acquisition and Evolution of Plant Pathogenesis–Associated Gene Clusters and Candidate Determinants of Tissue-Specificity in Xanthomonas
title_full Acquisition and Evolution of Plant Pathogenesis–Associated Gene Clusters and Candidate Determinants of Tissue-Specificity in Xanthomonas
title_fullStr Acquisition and Evolution of Plant Pathogenesis–Associated Gene Clusters and Candidate Determinants of Tissue-Specificity in Xanthomonas
title_full_unstemmed Acquisition and Evolution of Plant Pathogenesis–Associated Gene Clusters and Candidate Determinants of Tissue-Specificity in Xanthomonas
title_short Acquisition and Evolution of Plant Pathogenesis–Associated Gene Clusters and Candidate Determinants of Tissue-Specificity in Xanthomonas
title_sort acquisition and evolution of plant pathogenesis–associated gene clusters and candidate determinants of tissue-specificity in xanthomonas
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2585010/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19043590
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0003828
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