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Loss of Flagella-Related Genes Enables a Nonflagellated, Fungal-Predating Bacterium To Strengthen the Synthesis of an Antifungal Weapon
Loss of flagellar genes causes a nonmotile phenotype. The genus Lysobacter consists of numerous environmentally ubiquitous, nonflagellated bacteria, including Lysobacter enzymogenes, an antifungal bacterium that is beneficial to plants. L. enzymogenes still has many flagellar genes on its genome, al...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
American Society for Microbiology
2023
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9927559/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36629418 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04149-22 |
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author | Xiong, Dan Yang, Zixiang He, Xueting He, Weimei Shen, Danyu Wang, Lu Lin, Long Murero, Aprodisia Minamino, Tohru Shao, Xiaolong Qian, Guoliang |
author_facet | Xiong, Dan Yang, Zixiang He, Xueting He, Weimei Shen, Danyu Wang, Lu Lin, Long Murero, Aprodisia Minamino, Tohru Shao, Xiaolong Qian, Guoliang |
author_sort | Xiong, Dan |
collection | PubMed |
description | Loss of flagellar genes causes a nonmotile phenotype. The genus Lysobacter consists of numerous environmentally ubiquitous, nonflagellated bacteria, including Lysobacter enzymogenes, an antifungal bacterium that is beneficial to plants. L. enzymogenes still has many flagellar genes on its genome, although this bacterium does not engage in flagella-driven motility. Here, we report that loss of certain flagellar genes allows L. enzymogenes to strengthen its evolutionarily gained capacity in fungal killing. To clarify why this bacterium loses flagellar genes during the evolutionary process, we cloned several representative flagellar genes from Xanthomonas oryzae, a flagellated, phylogenetically related species of Lysobacter, and introduced them individually into L. enzymogenes to mimic genomic reacquisition of lost flagellar genes. Heterogeneous expression of the three X. oryzae flagellar structural genes (Xo-motA, Xo-motB, Xo-fliE) and one flagellar regulatory gene (Xo-fleQ) remarkably weakened the bacterial capacity to kill fungal pathogens by impairing the synthesis of an antifungal weapon, known as the heat-stable antifungal factor (HSAF). We further investigated the underlying mechanism by selecting Xo-FleQ as the representative because it is a master transcription factor responsible for flagellar gene expression. Xo-FleQ inhibited the transcription of operon genes responsible for HSAF synthesis via direct binding of Xo-FleQ to the promoter region, thereby decreasing HSAF biosynthesis by L. enzymogenes. These observations suggest a possible genome and function coevolution event, in which an antifungal bacterium deletes certain flagellar genes in order to enhance its ability to kill fungi. IMPORTANCE It is generally recognized that flagellar genes are commonly responsible for the flagella-driven bacterial motility. Thus, finding nonflagellated bacteria partially or fully lost flagellar genes is not a surprise. However, the present study provides new insights into this common idea. We found that loss of either certain flagellar structural or regulatory genes (such as motA, motB, fliE, and fleQ) allows a nonflagellated, antifungal bacterium (L. enzymogenes) to stimulate its fungal-killing capacity, outlining a genome-function coevolution event, where an antifungal bacterium “smartly” designed its genome to “delete” crucial flagellar genes to coordinate flagellar loss and fungal predation. This unusual finding might trigger bacteriologists to reconsider previously ignored functions of the lost flagellar genes in any nonflagellated, pathogenic, or beneficial bacteria. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-9927559 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2023 |
publisher | American Society for Microbiology |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-99275592023-02-15 Loss of Flagella-Related Genes Enables a Nonflagellated, Fungal-Predating Bacterium To Strengthen the Synthesis of an Antifungal Weapon Xiong, Dan Yang, Zixiang He, Xueting He, Weimei Shen, Danyu Wang, Lu Lin, Long Murero, Aprodisia Minamino, Tohru Shao, Xiaolong Qian, Guoliang Microbiol Spectr Research Article Loss of flagellar genes causes a nonmotile phenotype. The genus Lysobacter consists of numerous environmentally ubiquitous, nonflagellated bacteria, including Lysobacter enzymogenes, an antifungal bacterium that is beneficial to plants. L. enzymogenes still has many flagellar genes on its genome, although this bacterium does not engage in flagella-driven motility. Here, we report that loss of certain flagellar genes allows L. enzymogenes to strengthen its evolutionarily gained capacity in fungal killing. To clarify why this bacterium loses flagellar genes during the evolutionary process, we cloned several representative flagellar genes from Xanthomonas oryzae, a flagellated, phylogenetically related species of Lysobacter, and introduced them individually into L. enzymogenes to mimic genomic reacquisition of lost flagellar genes. Heterogeneous expression of the three X. oryzae flagellar structural genes (Xo-motA, Xo-motB, Xo-fliE) and one flagellar regulatory gene (Xo-fleQ) remarkably weakened the bacterial capacity to kill fungal pathogens by impairing the synthesis of an antifungal weapon, known as the heat-stable antifungal factor (HSAF). We further investigated the underlying mechanism by selecting Xo-FleQ as the representative because it is a master transcription factor responsible for flagellar gene expression. Xo-FleQ inhibited the transcription of operon genes responsible for HSAF synthesis via direct binding of Xo-FleQ to the promoter region, thereby decreasing HSAF biosynthesis by L. enzymogenes. These observations suggest a possible genome and function coevolution event, in which an antifungal bacterium deletes certain flagellar genes in order to enhance its ability to kill fungi. IMPORTANCE It is generally recognized that flagellar genes are commonly responsible for the flagella-driven bacterial motility. Thus, finding nonflagellated bacteria partially or fully lost flagellar genes is not a surprise. However, the present study provides new insights into this common idea. We found that loss of either certain flagellar structural or regulatory genes (such as motA, motB, fliE, and fleQ) allows a nonflagellated, antifungal bacterium (L. enzymogenes) to stimulate its fungal-killing capacity, outlining a genome-function coevolution event, where an antifungal bacterium “smartly” designed its genome to “delete” crucial flagellar genes to coordinate flagellar loss and fungal predation. This unusual finding might trigger bacteriologists to reconsider previously ignored functions of the lost flagellar genes in any nonflagellated, pathogenic, or beneficial bacteria. American Society for Microbiology 2023-01-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9927559/ /pubmed/36629418 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04149-22 Text en Copyright © 2023 Xiong et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . |
spellingShingle | Research Article Xiong, Dan Yang, Zixiang He, Xueting He, Weimei Shen, Danyu Wang, Lu Lin, Long Murero, Aprodisia Minamino, Tohru Shao, Xiaolong Qian, Guoliang Loss of Flagella-Related Genes Enables a Nonflagellated, Fungal-Predating Bacterium To Strengthen the Synthesis of an Antifungal Weapon |
title | Loss of Flagella-Related Genes Enables a Nonflagellated, Fungal-Predating Bacterium To Strengthen the Synthesis of an Antifungal Weapon |
title_full | Loss of Flagella-Related Genes Enables a Nonflagellated, Fungal-Predating Bacterium To Strengthen the Synthesis of an Antifungal Weapon |
title_fullStr | Loss of Flagella-Related Genes Enables a Nonflagellated, Fungal-Predating Bacterium To Strengthen the Synthesis of an Antifungal Weapon |
title_full_unstemmed | Loss of Flagella-Related Genes Enables a Nonflagellated, Fungal-Predating Bacterium To Strengthen the Synthesis of an Antifungal Weapon |
title_short | Loss of Flagella-Related Genes Enables a Nonflagellated, Fungal-Predating Bacterium To Strengthen the Synthesis of an Antifungal Weapon |
title_sort | loss of flagella-related genes enables a nonflagellated, fungal-predating bacterium to strengthen the synthesis of an antifungal weapon |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9927559/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36629418 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.04149-22 |
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