| Literature DB >> 34371610 |
Vladimir Gorshkov1,2,3, Ivan Tsers2,3, Bakhtiyar Islamov1,2, Marina Ageeva1, Natalia Gogoleva1,2,3, Polina Mikshina1, Olga Parfirova1,2, Olga Gogoleva2, Olga Petrova1,2, Tatyana Gorshkova1, Yuri Gogolev1,2,3.
Abstract
Our study is the first to consider the changes in the entire set of matrix plant cell wall (PCW) polysaccharides in the course of a plant infectious disease. We compared the molecular weight distribution, monosaccharide content, and the epitope distribution of pectic compounds and cross-linking glycans in non-infected potato plants and plants infected with Pectobacterium atrosepticum at the initial and advanced stages of plant colonization by the pathogen. To predict the gene products involved in the modification of the PCW polysaccharide skeleton during the infection, the expression profiles of potato and P. atrosepticum PCW-related genes were analyzed by RNA-Seq along with phylogenetic analysis. The assemblage of P. atrosepticum biofilm-like structures-the bacterial emboli-and the accumulation of specific fragments of pectic compounds that prime the formation of these structures were demonstrated within potato plants (a natural host of P. atrosepticum). Collenchyma was shown to be the most "vulnerable" tissue to P. atrosepticum among the potato stem tissues. The infection caused by the representative of the Soft Rot Pectobacteriaceae was shown to affect not only pectic compounds but also cross-linking glycans; the content of the latter was increased in the infected plants compared to the non-infected ones.Entities:
Keywords: Pectobacterium; cross-linking glycans; pectic compounds; plant cell wall; plant soft rot; virulence factors
Year: 2021 PMID: 34371610 DOI: 10.3390/plants10071407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747