| Literature DB >> 28695265 |
Luigimaria Borruso1, Marco Salomone-Stagni1, Ivan Polsinelli1, Armin Otto Schmitt2, Stefano Benini3.
Abstract
The Erwinia genus comprises species that are plant pathogens, non-pathogen, epiphytes, and opportunistic human pathogens. Within the genus, Erwinia amylovora ranks among the top 10 plant pathogenic bacteria. It causes the fire blight disease and is a global threat to commercial apple and pear production. We analyzed the presence/absence of the E. amylovora genes reported to be important for pathogenicity towards Rosaceae within various Erwinia strains genomes. This simple bottom-up approach, allowed us to correlate the analyzed genes to pathogenicity, host specificity, and make useful considerations to drive targeted studies.Entities:
Keywords: BLAST; Comparative genomics; Fire blight; Pathogenesis; Virulence factor
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28695265 PMCID: PMC5663808 DOI: 10.1007/s00203-017-1409-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Microbiol ISSN: 0302-8933 Impact factor: 2.552
Characteristic of the Erwinia genome strains analyzed in this study
| Strain | Accession number | Habitat/host | Plant pathogenicity |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| GCA_000027205.1 |
| Pathogen of Spiraeoideaea (Mann et al. |
|
| GCA_000091565.1 |
| Pathogen of Spiraeoideae (Mann et al. |
|
| GCA_000513355.1 |
| Pathogen of |
|
| GCA_000513395.1 |
| Pathogen of |
|
| GCF_000513415.1 |
| Pathogen of |
|
| GCF_000240705.2 |
| Pathogen of Spiraeoideae (Mann et al. |
|
| GCF_000367545.1 |
| Pathogen of Spiraeoideae (Mann et al. |
|
| GCA_000367565.2 |
| Pathogen of Spiraeoideae (Mann et al. |
|
| GCF_000367585.2 |
| Pathogen of Spiraeoideae (Mann et al. |
|
| GCA_000367605.2 |
| Pathogen of Spiraeoideae (Mann et al. |
|
| GCA_000367625.2 |
| Pathogen of Spiraeoideae (Mann et al. |
|
| GCA_000367645.1 |
| Pathogen of Spiraeoideae (Mann et al. |
|
| GCA_000696075.1 |
| – |
|
| GCA_000696075.1 |
| Pathogen of |
|
| GCA_000367685.2 |
| Pathogen of |
|
| GCA_000027265.1 |
| Pathogen of |
|
| GCA_000026985.1 |
| Pathogen of |
|
| GCA_000165815.1 |
| Pathogen of |
|
| GCA_001050515.1 |
| Pathogen of |
|
| GCA_000026185.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Kube et al. |
|
| GCA_000773975.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Skrodenyte-Arbaciauskiene et al. |
|
| GCF_001269445.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Klein et al. |
|
| GCA_000196615.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Kube et al. |
|
| GCA_000336255.1 |
| Pathogen associatedd of |
|
| GCF_001484765.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Liu et al. |
|
| GCA_000745075.1 | Facultative endohyphal bacterium | Non-pathogen (Baltrus et al. |
|
| GCA_000770305.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Moretti et al. |
|
| GCA_000975275.1 |
| Pathogen of Cucurbitaceae (Shapiro et al. |
|
| GCA_000404125.1 |
| Pathogen of Cucurbitaceae (Shapiro et al. |
|
| GCA_000590885.1 |
| Pathogen of |
|
| GCA_001571305.1 |
| Pathogen of Leguminosae (González et al. |
|
| GCA_900068895.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Lopez-Fernandez et al. |
|
| GCA_001517405.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Rezzonico et al. |
|
| GCA_001689725.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Blow et al. |
|
| GCA_001756855.1 |
| Non-pathogene |
|
| GCA_001422605.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Bai et al. |
|
| GCA_001267545.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Campillo et al. |
|
| GCA_001267535.1 |
| Non-pathogen (Campillo et al. |
aNomenclature that follows Potter et al., Plant Syst. Evol., 2007 (Potter et al. 2007). However, some authors define the subfamily as Amygdaloideae
bNo reference available
cInformation derived from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/biosample/SAMD00016891/ on February the 15th 2017
dFound on olive knots caused by the plant bacterium Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. savastanoi. The presence of E. toletana is correlated with the virulence of the disease suggesting a possible interactions with P. savastanoi pv. Savastanoi
eHere we assume that this strain is non-pathogenic based on E. dacicola Erw SC
*E. amylovora CFBP1430 is the reference genome where all the DNA gene sequences were extracted
#These strains are Rosaceae-infecting
Fig. 1Heatmap hierarchical clustering: on the right, Erwinia strains are listed; on the bottom, genes important for virulence within E. amylovora are reported. Color code: green indicates a coverage ≥80% with an identity between 100% and 80%, yellow indicates a coverage ≥80% with an identity lower than 75%, red indicates a coverage lower than 75% that is interpreted as the absence of the paralogue. The genes are grouped according to the functional system: a exopolysaccharide metabolism, b sorbitol metabolism, c guanine derivative regulation, d desferrioxamine pathway, e type 1 secretion system, f type 3 secretion system, g others (transcription regulator, two-component transduction, positive regulator of virulence factor and sRNA chaperone). #These strains are Rosaceae-infecting apart from E. tasmaniensis ET1/99. The figure was rendered with the Krita software