| Literature DB >> 20041212 |
Cindy E Morris1, Marc Bardin, Linda L Kinkel, Benoit Moury, Philippe C Nicot, David C Sands.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20041212 PMCID: PMC2790610 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Examples of putative dual-use traits related to pathogenic and environmental fitness of human pathogens.
| Organism | Trait or Gene | Role in Pathogenic Fitness | Role in Environmental Fitness | Reference |
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| Toxin co-regulated pilus | Virulence factor in humans | Biofilm formation on chitin |
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| Eukaryotic-like proteins that mimic cellular functions of eukaryotic proteins; type II and type IV secretion systems, surface proteins involved in attachment, secreted effectors | Virulence factors in macrophages | Parasitism and multiplication in protozoa |
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| Quorum-sensing regulatory system | Regulation of virulence factors implicated in “cepacia syndrome” | Regulation of factors involved in nematode killing |
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| Extracellular polysaccharide production linked to the action of heme storage gene ( | Transmission to the human host and protection from the action of leukocytes | Colonization of flea esophagus via biofilm formation |
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| Melanins | Protects microbial cells against phagocytosis | Protection against oxidation |
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| Siderophores | Virulence factor in humans | Sequestering iron in the environment |
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| Efflux pumps | Intrinsic multidrug resistance | Exclusion of lipophilic toxic compounds from cells |
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| Efflux pumps, genetic promiscuity, exopolysaccharides and biofilm formation, siderophore-like compounds | Multidrug resistance, attachement, stimulation of host inflammation, virulence factor in humans | Exclusion of toxic compounds from cells, resistance to desiccation, sequestering of iron |
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Examples of plant pathogens reported to thrive in nonagricultural habitats or to survive saprophytically in agricultural contexts in the absence of host plants.
| Species | Nonagricultural Habitats or Substrates Where Microbe Has Been Detected | Putative Factors Conducive to Survival | References |
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| Ubiquitous in soils and waters and associated habitats | Unusually large genome harboring genes for a multitude of traits related to ecological fitness including the capacity to use a large spectrum of carbon sources |
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| Oceanic aerosols, soils, alpine rivers, and other surface water, snow | Capacity of pectolytic bacteria to obtain nutrients from rotting plant material and to use a wide range of carbon sources; cell surface properties than foster condensation of water vapor; growth and survival as a facultative anaerobe |
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| Fecal matter, soil, surface waters | This bacterium is generally an opportunistic plant pathogen that is normally a fit saprophyte |
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| Clouds, snow rain, epilithic biofilms, wild alpine plants (substrates linked to the water cycle) | Biofilm formation; production of toxins and siderophores; survival of freezing |
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| Soil, ice, polar seawater, lesions on animals, rinds of cheese | Sexual promiscuity favoring acquisition of diverse plasmid-borne traits; capacity to shift metabolic pathways as a function of food base |
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| Ubiquitous in soil and water | Production of a diverse array of degradative enzymes critical to saprophytic lifestyle; capacity to produce a wide range of antibiotics important in species interactions; resistant to many antibiotics |
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| Most | Derive energy as a result of cellulytic activity. Production of toxic secondary metabolites. Production of melanin protecting against environmental stress or unfavorable conditions (extreme temperatures, UV radiation and compounds secreted by microbial antagonists). |
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| Marine and terrestrial habitats, soil; associated with insects, humans, and other animals | Production of toxins including aflatoxins; production of siderophores and degradative enzymes (pectinases, proteases) |
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| Soil; atmospheric aerosols | Carbohydrate-binding protein modules (LysM effectors). No other suppositions found in the literature. |
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| Soil; extreme saline soil habitats; marine and fluvial habitats | Production of defense-related metabolites (antibiotics, trichotecenes, mycotoxins…) and of siderophores; vigor in competitive use of foods, ability to colonize a wide range of substrates |
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| Can survive as a saprobe for many years on debris | Maintains numerous genes required for saprophytic life (for nutrient acquisition, competition with soil microflora), necrotrophic parasitism via toxins and degradative enzymes |
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| Soil and a variety of organic substrates; marine habitats including insect cadavers | Production of siderophores (by |
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| Soil and water | No suppositions found in the literature |
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| Soil, sediment-rich subglacial ice; atmospheric aerosols | Production of toxins and siderophores |
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| Tomato mosaic virus | Clouds, glacial ice, soil of pristine forests | Overall stability of tobamoviruses |
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Novel hypotheses to be tested concerning the impact of substrates other than host plants on the evolutionary potential of plant pathogens.
| Evolutionary Force | Novel Hypothesis Arising from Expanded Paradigms about the Evolution of Plant Pathogenicity Concerning: |
| Mutation |
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| Relative to its association with cultivated plant hosts, association of the pathogen with a given nonagricultural substrate leads to: | |
| • a significantly greater overall mutation rate. | |
| • a greater rate of transposition of insertion sequences or of transposable elements. | |
| • more frequent mutations or transpositions that target genes involved in pathogenicity. | |
| • a higher probability of acquisition of alien nucleic acids. | |
| • genetic exchange with more phylogenetically diverse microbes. | |
| Genetic drift |
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| The effective sub-population size of a pathogen associated with a given nonagricultural (or nonplant) substrate is significantly different from that for sub-populations from cultivated host plants. This could lead to genetic and/or phenotypic differentiation of sub-populations based on substrate of origin. | |
| Gene flow |
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| The habitats occupied by the plant pathogen influence the mode(s) of dissemination, thereby influencing the distance of dissemination and the spatial and temporal scales of gene flow. | |
| Mode of reproduction (recombination) |
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| The frequency of recombination (via sexual cycle or other means) varies among strains of plant pathogens as a function of the habitat or substrate. | |
| Selection |
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| Strains of pathogens adapted to a broad range of habitats have the greatest parasitic fitness. |
The evolutionary forces listed here are those that have been considered for plant pathogens in agricultural contexts [56]. These hypotheses concern pathogens with a marked saprophytic phase or for which nonagricultural or nonplant substrates can be a notable reservoir for survival. Reservoirs can include irrigation water, natural waterways and bodies of water, biological vectors (animals, fungi, etc.), abiotic vectors (aerosols, clouds, precipitation), wild plants and weeds, soil, and physical structures in agricultural systems (greenhouse materials, tubing, plastics).