Did you mean: dickeyadadantii
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Brazilian Journal of Microbiology :... 2015One of the most economically important bacterial pathogens of plants and plant products is Dickeya dadantii. This bacterium causes soft rot disease in tubers and other...
One of the most economically important bacterial pathogens of plants and plant products is Dickeya dadantii. This bacterium causes soft rot disease in tubers and other parts of the potato and other plants of the Solanaceae family. The application of restricted host range bacteriophages as biocontrol agents has recently gained widespread interest. This study purposed to isolate the infectious agent of the potato and evaluate its biocontrol by bacteriophages. Two phytopathogenic strains were isolated from infected potatoes, identified based on biochemical and 16S rRNA gene sequencing, and submitted to GenBank as D. dadantii strain pis3 (accession no. HQ423668) and D. dadantii strain sip4 (accession no. HQ423669). Their bacteriophages were isolated from Caspian Sea water by enriching the water filtrate with D. dadantii strains as hosts using spot or overlay methods. On the basis of morphotypes, the isolated bacteriophages were identified as members of the Myoviridae and Siphoviridae families and could inhibit the growth of antibiotic resistant D. dadantii strains in culture medium. Moreover, in Dickeya infected plants treated with bacteriophage, no disease progression was detected. No significant difference was seen between phage-treated and control plants. Thus, isolated bacteriophages can be suggested for the biocontrol of plant disease caused by Dickeya strains.
Topics: Bacteriophages; Base Sequence; Biological Control Agents; DNA, Bacterial; Dickeya chrysanthemi; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Molecular Sequence Data; Myoviridae; Plant Diseases; RNA, Ribosomal, 16S; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Siphoviridae; Solanum tuberosum
PubMed: 26413062
DOI: 10.1590/S1517-838246320140498 -
Frontiers in Microbiology 2022species are causal agents of soft rot diseases in many economically important crops, including soft rot disease of potato (). Using random barcode transposon-site...
species are causal agents of soft rot diseases in many economically important crops, including soft rot disease of potato (). Using random barcode transposon-site sequencing (RB-TnSeq), we generated genome-wide mutant fitness profiles of 3937, ME23, and 67-19 isolates collected after passage through several and conditions. Though all three strains are pathogenic on potato, 3937 is a well-characterized model while strains ME23 and 67-19 are recent isolates. Strain ME23 specifically was identified as a representative strain from a 2014 outbreak on potato. This study generated comparable gene fitness measurements across ecologically relevant conditions for both model and non-model strains. Tubers from the potato cultivars "Atlantic," "Dark Red Norland," and "Upstate Abundance" provided highly similar conditions for bacterial growth. Using the homolog detection software PyParanoid, we matched fitness values for orthologous genes in the three bacterial strains. Direct comparison of fitness among the strains highlighted shared and variable traits important for growth. Bacterial growth in minimal medium required many metabolic traits that were also essential for competitive growth , such as amino acid, carbohydrate, and nucleotide biosynthesis. Growth in tubers specifically required the pectin degradation gene . Disruption in three putative DNA-binding proteins had strain-specific effects on competitive fitness in tubers. Though the Soft Rot can cause disease with little host specificity, it remains to be seen the extent to which strain-level variation impacts virulence.
PubMed: 35145503
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.778927 -
PloS One 2022Dickeya are plant pathogenic bacteria able to provoke disease on a wide range of plants. A type 2 secretion system (T2SS) named Out is necessary for Dickeya virulence....
Dickeya are plant pathogenic bacteria able to provoke disease on a wide range of plants. A type 2 secretion system (T2SS) named Out is necessary for Dickeya virulence. Previous studies showed that the D. dadantii T2SS secretes a wide range of plant cell wall degrading enzymes, including pectinases and a cellulase. However, the full repertoire of exoproteins it can secrete has probably not yet been identified. Secreted proteins possess a signal peptide and are first addressed to the periplasm before their recruitment by Out. T2SS-specific secretion signals remain unknown which prevents in silico identification of T2SS substrates. To identify new Out substrates, we analyzed D. dadantii transcriptome data obtained in plant infection condition and searched for genes strongly induced and encoding proteins with a signal sequence. We identified four new Out-secreted proteins: the expansin YoaJ, the putative virulence factor VirK and two proteins of the DUF 4879 family, SvfA and SvfB. We showed that SvfA and SvfB are required for full virulence of D. dadantii and that svf genes are present in a variable number of copies in other Pectobacteriaceae, up to three in D. fanghzongdai. This work opens the way to the study of the role of non-pectinolytic proteins secreted by the Out pathway in Pectobacteriaceae.
Topics: Bacterial Proteins; Dickeya; Enterobacteriaceae; Gammaproteobacteria; Plant Diseases; Type II Secretion Systems; Virulence Factors
PubMed: 35417462
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0265075 -
MBio Jun 2022The phytopathogenic proteobacterium Dickeya dadantii secretes an array of plant cell wall-degrading enzymes and other virulence factors via the type 2 secretion system...
Scaffolding Protein GspB/OutB Facilitates Assembly of the Dickeya dadantii Type 2 Secretion System by Anchoring the Outer Membrane Secretin Pore to the Inner Membrane and to the Peptidoglycan Cell Wall.
The phytopathogenic proteobacterium Dickeya dadantii secretes an array of plant cell wall-degrading enzymes and other virulence factors via the type 2 secretion system (T2SS). T2SSs are widespread among important plant, animal, and human bacterial pathogens. This multiprotein complex spans the double membrane cell envelope and secretes fully folded proteins through a large outer membrane pore formed by 15 subunits of the secretin GspD. Secretins are also found in the type 3 secretion system and the type 4 pili. Usually, specialized lipoproteins termed pilotins assist the targeting and assembly of secretins into the outer membrane. Here, we show that in , the pilotin acts in concert with the scaffolding protein GspB. Deletion of profoundly impacts secretin assembly, pectinase secretion, and virulence. Structural studies reveal that GspB possesses a conserved periplasmic homology region domain that interacts directly with the N-terminal secretin domain. Site-specific photo-cross-linking unravels molecular details of the GspB-GspD complex . We show that GspB facilitates outer membrane targeting and assembly of the secretin pores and anchors them to the inner membrane while the C-terminal extension of GspB provides a scaffold for the secretin channel in the peptidoglycan cell wall. Phylogenetic analysis shows that in other bacteria, GspB homologs vary in length and domain composition and act in concert with either a cognate ATPase GspA or the pilotin GspS. Gram-negative bacteria have two cell membranes sandwiching a peptidoglycan net that together form a robust protective cell envelope. To translocate effector proteins across this multilayer envelope, bacteria have evolved several specialized secretion systems. In the type 2 secretion system and some other bacterial machineries, secretins form large multimeric pores that allow transport of effector proteins or filaments across the outer membrane. The secretins are essential for nutrient acquisition and pathogenicity and constitute a target for development of new antibacterials. Targeting of secretin subunits into the outer membrane is often facilitated by a special class of lipoproteins called pilotins. Here, we show that in and some other bacteria, the scaffolding protein GspB acts in concert with pilotin, facilitating the assembly of the secretin pore and its anchoring to both the inner membrane and the bacterial cell wall. GspB homologs of varied domain composition are present in many other T2SSs.
Topics: Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins; Bacterial Proteins; Cell Wall; Dickeya; Enterobacteriaceae; Lipoproteins; Peptidoglycan; Phylogeny; Secretin; Type II Secretion Systems
PubMed: 35546537
DOI: 10.1128/mbio.00253-22 -
Molecular Plant Pathology Aug 2022Bacteria use signal transduction systems to sense and respond to their external environment. The two-component system CpxA/CpxR senses misfolded envelope protein stress...
Bacteria use signal transduction systems to sense and respond to their external environment. The two-component system CpxA/CpxR senses misfolded envelope protein stress and responds by up-regulating envelope protein factors and down-regulating virulence factors in several animal pathogens. Dickeya dadantii is a phytopathogen equipped with a type III secretion system (T3SS) for manipulating the host immune response. We found that deletion of cpxR enhanced the expression of the T3SS marker gene hrpA in a designated T3SS-inducing minimal medium (MM). In the ∆cpxR mutant, multiple T3SS and c-di-GMP regulators were also up-regulated. Subsequent analysis revealed that deletion of the phosphodiesterase gene egcpB in ∆cpxR abolished the enhanced T3SS expression. This suggested that CpxR suppresses EGcpB levels, causing low T3SS expression in MM. Furthermore, we found that the ∆cpxR mutant displayed low c-di-GMP phenotypes in biofilm formation and swimming. Increased production of cellular c-di-GMP by in trans expression of the diguanylate cyclase gene gcpA was negated in the ∆cpxR mutant. Here, we propose that CpxA/CpxR regulates T3SS expression by manipulating the c-di-GMP network, in turn modifying the multiple physiological activities involved in the response to environmental stresses in D. dadantii.
Topics: Bacterial Proteins; Cyclic GMP; Dickeya; Enterobacteriaceae; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial; Virulence
PubMed: 35460168
DOI: 10.1111/mpp.13219 -
Plant Disease Jun 2022Philodendrons are important foliage ornamentals planted worldwide (Chen et al. 2010). In November 2021, soft rot symptoms were observed on (now known as ; Sakuragui et...
Philodendrons are important foliage ornamentals planted worldwide (Chen et al. 2010). In November 2021, soft rot symptoms were observed on (now known as ; Sakuragui et al. 2018) grown in a nursery in Taichung, Taiwan. On symptomatic plants, the petioles were macerated; leaf lesions were also found on some plants (Figure S1). About 60% of the plants on site were symptomatic; these plants tended to cluster together. Four plants were sampled. Infected tissues were soaked and cut into pieces in 10 mM MgCl (using scalpels); undiluted samples were streak-plated onto nutrient agar (NA) and grown for 24 h at 28°C. Translucent, creamy-white colonies were isolated from all of the tissues examined, and 4 isolates, PHIL1 to PHIL4, were obtained (each from a different plant). All isolates exhibited typical phenotypes of bacteria belonging to ; they could cause maceration symptoms on potato slices, ferment glucose and produce phosphatase (Schaad et al. 2001); they could also produce indigoidine on NGM medium (NA added with glycerol and MnCl; Lee and Yu. 2006). Polymerase chain reactions using -specific primers 5A and 5B (Chao et al. 2006) amplified the expected amplicon in all 4 isolates. The 16S rDNA of PHIL1 to PHIL4 were amplified using primer pair 27f/1492r (Lane 1991) and the amplicons were sequenced; all 4 isolates shared the same 1,395-bp sequence (accession nos. ON203122, ON479664-ON479666). Among the strains belonging to known species (in GenBank), PHIL1 to PHIL4 shared the highest sequence identity (99.93%) with . 3937; they also shared 98.78% sequence identity with . CFBP 1269. Multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) targeting fragments of PHIL1 to PHIL4's A (720 bp), J (672 bp), X (450 bp), B (822 bp), and N (762 bp) genes (Marrero et al. 2013) were conducted. The five-gene concatenated sequences (3,426 bp) of the 4 isolates (accession nos. ON227444-ON227448, ON494509-ON494523) were identical. A maximum-likelihood phylogenetic analysis including these sequences and those of type strains of other known species revealed that PHIL1 to PHIL4 clustered with strains belonging to . (Figure S2). Koch's postulates were fulfilled with an inoculation test conducted on . (17 cm in aboveground height; 7-months-old). Stab inoculation using sterile toothpicks was conducted on petioles. Three plants were tested for each isolate and 2 petioles were inoculated for each plant; all 4 isolates were included in the assay. The pathogen loads inoculated were quantified by the spread plate method and were 3.22 - 4.81 x 10 colony forming units. Three plants were stabbed with bacteria-free toothpicks, serving as controls. All plants were bagged post inoculation and kept in a growth chamber (28°C; 14 h light). After 72 h, all of the inoculated petioles exhibited symptoms resembling those observed in the nursery. Bacteria were re-isolated from the symptomatic tissues (one isolate from each treatment), and all of their five-gene concatenated sequences were the same as those of PHIL1 to PHIL4. This is the first formal report of the occurrence of . infecting . in Taiwan. Studies have shown that . could affect other Araceae plants in Taiwan (Lee and Chen 2021). Since different Araceae ornamentals are often planted together in gardens and nurseries, growers should be aware of potential transmission of . among them.
PubMed: 35771110
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-04-22-0924-PDN -
Plants (Basel, Switzerland) Apr 2023Nanomaterials are increasingly being used for crop growth, especially as a new paradigm for plant disease management. Among the other nanomaterials, silver nanoparticles...
Nanomaterials are increasingly being used for crop growth, especially as a new paradigm for plant disease management. Among the other nanomaterials, silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) draw a great deal of attention because of their unique features and multiple usages. Rapid expansion in nanotechnology and utilization of AgNPs in a large range of areas resulted in the substantial release of these nanoparticles into the soil and water environment, causing concern for the safety of ecosystems and phytosanitary. In an attempt to find an effective control measure for sweet potato soft rot disease, the pathogen was exposed to AgNPs, the cell-free culture supernatant (CFCS) of alone, and both in combination. AgNPs were synthesized using CFCS of strain A3. The green synthesized AgNPs exhibited a characteristic surface plasmon resonance peak at 410-420 nm. Electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction spectroscopy determined the nanocrystalline nature and 20-100 nm diameters of AgNPs. Release of metal Ag ion from biosynthesized AgNPs increases with time. AgNPs and CFCS of alone exhibited antibacterial activity against the growth, biofilm formation, swimming motility, and virulence of strain A3. The antibacterial activities elevated with the elevation in AgNPs and CFCS concentration. Similar antibacterial activities against were obtained with AgNPs at 50 µg·mL, 50% CFCS alone, and the combination of AgNPs at 12 µg·mL and 12% CFCS of . In planta experiments indicated that all the treatments reduced infection and increased plant growth. These findings suggest that AgNPs along with CFCS of can be applied to minimize this bacterial disease by controlling pathogen-contaminated sweet potato tuber with minimum Ag nano-pollutant in the environment.
PubMed: 37176882
DOI: 10.3390/plants12091817 -
MBio Jun 2022Dickeya dadantii is a phytopathogenic bacterium that causes soft rot in a wide range of plant hosts worldwide and a model organism for studying virulence gene...
Dickeya dadantii is a phytopathogenic bacterium that causes soft rot in a wide range of plant hosts worldwide and a model organism for studying virulence gene regulation. The present study provides a comprehensive and annotated transcriptomic map of obtained by a computational method combining five independent transcriptomic data sets: (i) paired-end RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) data for a precise reconstruction of the RNA landscape; (ii) DNA microarray data providing transcriptional responses to a broad variety of environmental conditions; (iii) long-read Nanopore native RNA-seq data for isoform-level transcriptome validation and determination of transcription termination sites; (iv) differential RNA sequencing (dRNA-seq) data for the precise mapping of transcription start sites; (v) DNA microarray data for a comparison of gene expression profiles between experiments and the early stages of plant infection. Our results show that transcription units sometimes coincide with predicted operons but are generally longer, most of them comprising internal promoters and terminators that generate alternative transcripts of variable gene composition. We characterize the occurrence of transcriptional read-through at terminators, which might play a basal regulation role and explain the extent of transcription beyond the scale of operons. We finally highlight the presence of noncontiguous operons and excludons in the genome, novel genomic arrangements that might contribute to the basal coordination of transcription. The highlighted transcriptional organization may allow to finely adjust its gene expression program for a rapid adaptation to fast-changing environments. This is the first transcriptomic map of a species. It may therefore significantly contribute to further progress in the field of phytopathogenicity. It is also one of the first reported applications of long-read Nanopore native RNA-seq in prokaryotes. Our findings yield insights into basal rules of coordination of transcription that might be valid for other bacteria and may raise interest in the field of microbiology in general. In particular, we demonstrate that gene expression is coordinated at the scale of transcription units rather than operons, which are larger functional genomic units capable of generating transcripts with variable gene composition for a fine-tuning of gene expression in response to environmental changes. In line with recent studies, our findings indicate that the canonical operon model is insufficient to explain the complexity of bacterial transcriptomes.
Topics: Bacteria; Dickeya; Enterobacteriaceae; Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial
PubMed: 35491820
DOI: 10.1128/mbio.00524-22 -
Plant Disease Apr 2024Blackleg and soft rot are harmful diseases in potato (Solanum tuberosum) caused by Pectobacterium spp. and Dickeya spp. (Czajkowski et al. 2015). The occurrence of...
Blackleg and soft rot are harmful diseases in potato (Solanum tuberosum) caused by Pectobacterium spp. and Dickeya spp. (Czajkowski et al. 2015). The occurrence of potato blackleg was serious in potato-producing areas around Xiapu County in Fujian Province, China, in 2021 (6 ha) and 2022 (7 ha), with an incidence of approximately 5%, which reached nearly 23%. Three diseased plants were collected to isolate the pathogen. Single colonies from each sampled plant were isolated and streaked onto fresh plates. DNA from three colonies from different plants was PCR amplified with primer pair 27F/1492R (Lane 1991) for the 16S rRNA gene. Since the sequences were identical, we selected strain M2-3 for further analysis. The strain M2-3 was gram-negative, pectolytic on CVP, grew at 37°C and 5% NaCl. The bacterium was positive for phosphatase activity, erythromycin sensitivity, indole production, gelatin liquefaction, malonic utilization, and acid production from, melibiose, raffinose, and arabinose. The bacterium was negative for sucrose, α-methyl glucoside, sorbitol, trehalose, lactose, and sodium citrate (Fujimoto et al. 2018;),although sucrose and lactose did not provide the expected results, there are exception in all species. The genome of strain M2-3 was sequenced and deposited in the NCBI database under accession numbers: CP077422. An Average Nucleotide Identity (ANI) analysis showed that M2-3 clustered with other D. dadantii strains and has a 98.39% identity with D. dadantii strain DSM 18020 (CP023467). The housekeeping genes (recA, dnaX, acnA, gapA, icd, mdh, mtlD and pgi) were amplified with primer pairs designed previously(Fujimoto et al. 2018; Ma et al. 2007) and sequenced. A multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) was performed by concatenating the 8 gene sequences and constructing a maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree using PhyloSuite version 1.2.1 (Zhang et al. 2020) and IQ-tree version 1.6.8 (Nguyen et al. 2015) software. Strain M2-3 was clustered together with Dickeya dadantii. For the pathogenicity test, three plants per treatment, totaling nine plants, were used. Bacterial suspensions (1×10^8 CFU/mL) were made in a 10mM PBS buffer. 10 μL of M2-3, D. dadantii type strain 18020 (positive control), and buffer (negative control) were injected into the plant stems near the base. Water stains appeared at the site of inoculation after 2 days and they gradually became black and rotten. The leaves became yellow and wilted, and the petiole base rotted within 5 days of inoculation completing the Koch postulate. According to average nucleotide identity and housekeeping gene sequence analysis, strain M2-3 was identified as Dickeya dadantii. Previous studies have reported several pathogens that cause potato blackleg in China, including P. atrosepticum, P. carotovorum, P. brasiliense, P. parmentieri, P. polaris, and P. punjabense (Li-ping et al. 2020; Wang et al. 2021). To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to report potato blackleg disease caused by Dickeya dadantii in Fujian Province, China. This finding suggests that this pathogen may cause a threat to potato production in Fujian Province.
PubMed: 38687907
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-04-23-0755-PDN -
Frontiers in Microbiology 2021is an important pathogenic bacterium that infects a number of crops including potato and chicory. While extensive works have been carried out on the control of the...
is an important pathogenic bacterium that infects a number of crops including potato and chicory. While extensive works have been carried out on the control of the transcription of its genes encoding the main virulence functions, little information is available on the post-transcriptional regulation of these functions. We investigated the involvement of the RNA chaperones Hfq and ProQ in the production of the main virulence functions. Phenotypic assays on the and mutants showed that inactivation of resulted in a growth defect, a modified capacity for biofilm formation and strongly reduced motility, and in the production of degradative extracellular enzymes (proteases, cellulase, and pectate lyases). Accordingly, the mutant failed to cause soft rot on chicory leaves. The mutant had reduced resistance to osmotic stress, reduced extracellular pectate lyase activity compared to the wild-type strain, and reduced virulence on chicory leaves. Most of the phenotypes of the and mutants were related to the low amounts of mRNA of the corresponding virulence factors. Complementation of the double mutant by each individual protein and cross-complementation of each chaperone suggested that they might exert their effects via partially overlapping but different sets of targets. Overall, it clearly appeared that the two Hfq and ProQ RNA chaperones are important regulators of pathogenicity in This underscores that virulence genes are regulated post-transcriptionally by non-coding RNAs.
PubMed: 34248909
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.687484