| Literature DB >> 33921272 |
Hiroya Yurimoto1, Kosuke Shiraishi1, Yasuyoshi Sakai1.
Abstract
Methanol is abundant in the phyllosphere, the surface of the above-ground parts of plants, and its concentration oscillates diurnally. The phyllosphere is one of the major habitats for a group of microorganisms, the so-called methylotrophs, that utilize one-carbon (C1) compounds, such as methanol and methane, as their sole source of carbon and energy. Among phyllospheric microorganisms, methanol-utilizing methylotrophic bacteria, known as pink-pigmented facultative methylotrophs (PPFMs), are the dominant colonizers of the phyllosphere, and some of them have recently been shown to have the ability to promote plant growth and increase crop yield. In addition to PPFMs, methanol-utilizing yeasts can proliferate and survive in the phyllosphere by using unique molecular and cellular mechanisms to adapt to the stressful phyllosphere environment. This review describes our current understanding of the physiology of methylotrophic bacteria and yeasts living in the phyllosphere where they are exposed to diurnal cycles of environmental conditions.Entities:
Keywords: diurnal adaptation; methanol; methylotrophs; phyllosphere; plant growth promotion
Year: 2021 PMID: 33921272 PMCID: PMC8069551 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9040809
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Figure 1Colonization of methanol-utilizing methylotrophs in the phyllosphere where methanol concentrations oscillate diurnally. Methanol-utilizing bacteria (one-carbon (C1) bacteria, pink-pigmented facultative methylotrophs (PPFMs)) and yeasts (C1 yeasts) colonize the surface of plant leaves and acquire nutrients produced by plants. Concentrations of methanol in the phyllosphere oscillate diurnally, with lower concentrations in the light period (L) and higher concentrations in the dark period (D). After the leaf printing on the agar medium containing methanol as the sole carbon source, pink-pigmented colonies were observed (left panel photo). Candida boidinii cells expressing the fluorescent protein Venus proliferate on Arabidopsis thaliana leaves (right panel photo).
Figure 2The cell-surface protein Wsc1 senses the methanol concentration in the phyllosphere and regulates peroxisome dynamics in methylotrophic yeast. Wsc1 senses a wide range of methanol concentrations that oscillate diurnally in the phyllosphere. A signal from Wsc1 is transmitted to the transcription factors, activating expression of methanol-induced genes followed by the development of peroxisomes. Under lower methanol concentrations and carbon source-depleted conditions, peroxisomes are degraded by pexophagy. Wsc1 and the downstream MAPK cascade repress pexophagy in the presence of methanol concentrations higher than 0.15%.
Figure 3Proposed regulatory network for integrative control of temperature-dependent UV resistance in M. extorquens AM1. When cells are exposed to UV light and/or high temperatures, the positive regulator KaiC1 is induced and the negative regulator KaiC2 is phosphorylated. The expression level of KaiC1 and the phosphorylation state of KaiC2 regulate genome-wide gene expression through the downstream regulator LabA. Both the kaiC1 and kaiC2 genes are regulated by downstream effectors.