| Literature DB >> 35446118 |
Lídia Dos Passos Lima1, Juliana Biar Pereira1, Anthony Jhoao Fasabi Flores1, Alan Péricles Rodrigues Lorenzetti2, Ana Laura Boechat3, Maria Claudia Pereda3, Sophia Gualtieri1, Daniele Ferreira do Prado1, Diego Rocha1, Lucas de Moraes Ceseti1, Regina Lúcia Baldini3, Chuck S Farah3, Tie Koide2, Celso Eduardo Benedetti4, Cristina E Alvarez-Martinez1.
Abstract
The genus Xanthomonas includes more than 30 phytopathogenic species that infect a wide range of plants and cause severe diseases that greatly impact crop productivity. These bacteria are highly adapted to the soil and plant environment, being found in decaying material, as epiphytes, and colonizing the plant mesophyll. Signal transduction mechanisms involved in the responses of Xanthomonas to environmental changes are still poorly characterized. Xanthomonad genomes typically encode several representatives of the extracytoplasmic function σ (σECF) factors, whose physiological roles remain elusive. In this work, we functionally characterized the Xanthomonas citri pv. citri EcfL, a σECF factor homologous to members of the iron-responsive FecI-like group. We show that EcfL is not required or induced during iron starvation, despite presenting the common features of other FecI-like σECF factors. EcfL positively regulates one operon composed of three genes that encode a TonB-dependent receptor involved in cell surface signaling, an acid phosphatase, and a lectin-domain containing protein. Furthermore, we demonstrate that EcfL is required for full virulence in citrus, and its regulon is induced inside the plant mesophyll and in response to acid stress. Together, our study suggests a role for EcfL in the adaptation of X. citri to the plant environment, in this way contributing to its ability to cause citrus canker disease. IMPORTANCE The Xanthomonas genus comprises a large number of phytopathogenic species that infect a wide variety of economically important plants worldwide. Bacterial adaptation to the plant and soil environment relies on their repertoire of signal transduction pathways, including alternative sigma factors of the extracytoplasmic function family (σECF). Here, we describe a new σECF factor found in several Xanthomonas species, demonstrating its role in Xanthomonas citri virulence to citrus plants. We show that EcfL regulates a single operon containing three genes, which are also conserved in other Xanthomonas species. This study further expands our knowledge on the functions of the widespread family of σECF factors in phytopathogenic bacteria.Entities:
Keywords: phytopathogens; regulation of gene expression; sigma factors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35446118 PMCID: PMC9112872 DOI: 10.1128/jb.00624-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bacteriol ISSN: 0021-9193 Impact factor: 3.476