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Rice-Infecting Pseudomonas Genomes Are Highly Accessorized and Harbor Multiple Putative Virulence Mechanisms to Cause Sheath Brown Rot

Sheath rot complex and seed discoloration in rice involve a number of pathogenic bacteria that cannot be associated with distinctive symptoms. These pathogens can easily travel on asymptomatic seeds and therefore represent a threat to rice cropping systems. Among the rice-infecting Pseudomonas, P. f...

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Autores principales: Quibod, Ian Lorenzo, Grande, Genelou, Oreiro, Eula Gems, Borja, Frances Nikki, Dossa, Gerbert Sylvestre, Mauleon, Ramil, Cruz, Casiana Vera, Oliva, Ricardo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4589537/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26422147
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139256
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author Quibod, Ian Lorenzo
Grande, Genelou
Oreiro, Eula Gems
Borja, Frances Nikki
Dossa, Gerbert Sylvestre
Mauleon, Ramil
Cruz, Casiana Vera
Oliva, Ricardo
author_facet Quibod, Ian Lorenzo
Grande, Genelou
Oreiro, Eula Gems
Borja, Frances Nikki
Dossa, Gerbert Sylvestre
Mauleon, Ramil
Cruz, Casiana Vera
Oliva, Ricardo
author_sort Quibod, Ian Lorenzo
collection PubMed
description Sheath rot complex and seed discoloration in rice involve a number of pathogenic bacteria that cannot be associated with distinctive symptoms. These pathogens can easily travel on asymptomatic seeds and therefore represent a threat to rice cropping systems. Among the rice-infecting Pseudomonas, P. fuscovaginae has been associated with sheath brown rot disease in several rice growing areas around the world. The appearance of a similar Pseudomonas population, which here we named P. fuscovaginae-like, represents a perfect opportunity to understand common genomic features that can explain the infection mechanism in rice. We showed that the novel population is indeed closely related to P. fuscovaginae. A comparative genomics approach on eight rice-infecting Pseudomonas revealed heterogeneous genomes and a high number of strain-specific genes. The genomes of P. fuscovaginae-like harbor four secretion systems (Type I, II, III, and VI) and other important pathogenicity machinery that could probably facilitate rice colonization. We identified 123 core secreted proteins, most of which have strong signatures of positive selection suggesting functional adaptation. Transcript accumulation of putative pathogenicity-related genes during rice colonization revealed a concerted virulence mechanism. The study suggests that rice-infecting Pseudomonas causing sheath brown rot are intrinsically diverse and maintain a variable set of metabolic capabilities as a potential strategy to occupy a range of environments.
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spelling pubmed-45895372015-10-02 Rice-Infecting Pseudomonas Genomes Are Highly Accessorized and Harbor Multiple Putative Virulence Mechanisms to Cause Sheath Brown Rot Quibod, Ian Lorenzo Grande, Genelou Oreiro, Eula Gems Borja, Frances Nikki Dossa, Gerbert Sylvestre Mauleon, Ramil Cruz, Casiana Vera Oliva, Ricardo PLoS One Research Article Sheath rot complex and seed discoloration in rice involve a number of pathogenic bacteria that cannot be associated with distinctive symptoms. These pathogens can easily travel on asymptomatic seeds and therefore represent a threat to rice cropping systems. Among the rice-infecting Pseudomonas, P. fuscovaginae has been associated with sheath brown rot disease in several rice growing areas around the world. The appearance of a similar Pseudomonas population, which here we named P. fuscovaginae-like, represents a perfect opportunity to understand common genomic features that can explain the infection mechanism in rice. We showed that the novel population is indeed closely related to P. fuscovaginae. A comparative genomics approach on eight rice-infecting Pseudomonas revealed heterogeneous genomes and a high number of strain-specific genes. The genomes of P. fuscovaginae-like harbor four secretion systems (Type I, II, III, and VI) and other important pathogenicity machinery that could probably facilitate rice colonization. We identified 123 core secreted proteins, most of which have strong signatures of positive selection suggesting functional adaptation. Transcript accumulation of putative pathogenicity-related genes during rice colonization revealed a concerted virulence mechanism. The study suggests that rice-infecting Pseudomonas causing sheath brown rot are intrinsically diverse and maintain a variable set of metabolic capabilities as a potential strategy to occupy a range of environments. Public Library of Science 2015-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4589537/ /pubmed/26422147 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139256 Text en © 2015 Quibod 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
Quibod, Ian Lorenzo
Grande, Genelou
Oreiro, Eula Gems
Borja, Frances Nikki
Dossa, Gerbert Sylvestre
Mauleon, Ramil
Cruz, Casiana Vera
Oliva, Ricardo
Rice-Infecting Pseudomonas Genomes Are Highly Accessorized and Harbor Multiple Putative Virulence Mechanisms to Cause Sheath Brown Rot
title Rice-Infecting Pseudomonas Genomes Are Highly Accessorized and Harbor Multiple Putative Virulence Mechanisms to Cause Sheath Brown Rot
title_full Rice-Infecting Pseudomonas Genomes Are Highly Accessorized and Harbor Multiple Putative Virulence Mechanisms to Cause Sheath Brown Rot
title_fullStr Rice-Infecting Pseudomonas Genomes Are Highly Accessorized and Harbor Multiple Putative Virulence Mechanisms to Cause Sheath Brown Rot
title_full_unstemmed Rice-Infecting Pseudomonas Genomes Are Highly Accessorized and Harbor Multiple Putative Virulence Mechanisms to Cause Sheath Brown Rot
title_short Rice-Infecting Pseudomonas Genomes Are Highly Accessorized and Harbor Multiple Putative Virulence Mechanisms to Cause Sheath Brown Rot
title_sort rice-infecting pseudomonas genomes are highly accessorized and harbor multiple putative virulence mechanisms to cause sheath brown rot
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4589537/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26422147
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139256
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