Virulence of Pseudomonas savastanoi: Difference between revisions

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<br>Resistant olive cultivars are rare, though susceptibility to <i>P. savastanoi</i>does vary. Young olive plants are particularly non-resistant to infection (Penyalver et al. 2006). <i>P. savastanoi</i>can be epiphytic upon infection (Rodriguez-Moreno et al. 2009).
<br>Resistant olive cultivars are rare, though susceptibility to <i>P. savastanoi</i>does vary. Young olive plants are particularly non-resistant to infection (Penyalver et al. 2006). <i>P. savastanoi</i>can be epiphytic upon infection (Rodriguez-Moreno et al. 2009).


==<font size="5"><b>Mechanisms of Virulence:</b>==
==<font size="5"><b>Mechanisms of Virulence</b></font>==
<br><b><font size="4">Plant hormones: cytokinin and IAA</font></b>
<br><b><font size="4">Plant hormones: cytokinin and IAA</font></b>
<br>Infection by <i>Pseudomonas savastanoi</i> causes cavities in host cells in which bacteria can aggregate (Marchi et al. 2009). <i>P. savastanoi</i> also accumulate in the xylem, which suggests a mechanism, heretofore unverified, of bacterial transport throughout the plant (Rodriguez-Moreno et al. 2009).  
<br>Infection by <i>Pseudomonas savastanoi</i> causes cavities in host cells in which bacteria can aggregate (Marchi et al. 2009). <i>P. savastanoi</i> also accumulate in the xylem, which suggests a mechanism, heretofore unverified, of bacterial transport throughout the plant (Rodriguez-Moreno et al. 2009).  

Revision as of 02:38, 25 April 2013


Hildy Joseph, Kenyon 2013

Introduction

Olive knot disease infecting an olive plant. Source: http://www.cbgp.upm.es/en/phytopathogenic_bacteria.php


Olive knot disease, which is characterized by knots and galls on emerging stems, branches, and occasionally leaves, was first described in the fourth century B.C. by the Greek philosopher Teophrastus.

Teophrastus, the Greek philosopher to first document olive knot disease in the fourth century B.C. Source: http://www.biografiasyvidas.com/biografia/t/teofrasto.htm

Pseudomonas savastanoi is the bacteria responsible for olive knot disease (Iacobellis 2001). Infection occurs through wounds induced by pruning or severe weather occurrences, including freezing and hail (Young 2004). Plants experience death and decay, including reduced limb size and plant size as well as defoliation, within eight months of infection (Iacobellis 2001). The overall vigor of olive trees inoculated with P. savastanoihas been shown to decline (Quesada et al. 2009). Knots tend to form in the spring during the most active growth period (Young 2004). Plant vulnerability is also increased in the autumn, in part because of other pathogens like the fungus Spilocaea oleaginea target olive trees at the same time. Thus, the chance of co-infection by
P. savastanoiis heightened (Teviotdale and Krueger 2004). The bacterium spreads easily within an orchard via wind or pruning tools (Young 2004). Moreover, once infected, P. savastanoi can spread to new wound sites within the same plant (Penyalver et al. 2006). Olive quality from infected plants is greatly reduced. Olives from infected plants are bitter, salty, sour, or rancid (Iacobellis 2001). Yield is also negatively impacted by the disease. Olive knot disease is a global issue and has been found in parts of Europe, Asia, Africa, North America, South America, and Australia. The incidence and degree of virulence varies by location (Young 2004).
Understanding the virulence of P. savastanoi is important because of the emerging economic significance of olives and olive oil.

Promoting olive crops has been of interest due to the proven health benefits of the Mediterranean diet, which includes olives and olive oil. Source: http://www.walksofitaly.com

Olive oil comprises a major part of the Mediterranean diet, which is becoming increasingly popular because of its health benefits. The Mediterranean diet has been associated with a plethora of health benefits, reducing LDL-cholesterol and improving HDL-cholesterol, which lessens the risk for heart disease, as well as improvement in digestion and autoimmune or inflammatory diseases (Bertolini et al. 2003 and Alarcon de la Lastra et al. 2001). Furthermore, crops are often grown as monocultures. Reduced genetic diversity can increases susceptibility to disease. Thus, understanding plant pathogens is essential for preserving essential food sources (Grinter et al. 2012).


Classification of P. savastanoi
The genus Psuedomonas consists of Gram-negative bacteria that are highly prevalent in nature and includes phytopathogenic as well as nonpathogenic species (Janse 1982 and Yamamoto et al. 2000). P. savastonoi is a nonsporeforming bacteria that contains several flagella for motility (Janse 1982). The genus also includes the human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Hancock et al. 1998). The occurrence of phytopathogeny is polphyletic among species of Pseudomonas, which provides evidence for horizontal gene transfer. The virulence genes may have first arisen in the common ancestor for the clade of plant pathogens within Pseudomonas, termed the 'P. syringae complex', which includes P. savastanoi. More recently evolutionarily, the virulence genes may have been transferred horizontally to other species in Pseudomonas. The complex comprises a pathogenicity island. (Yamamoto et al. 2000). Generally, pathogens in the P. syringae complex cause leaf death and cankers, but P. savastanoi pv. savastanoi has a unique pathogenicity for the complex (Ramos et al. 2012).
P. savastonoi was originally thought to be one of forty-five pathovars of Pseudomonas syringae due to similar biochemistry and physiology. DNA-DNA hybridization data revealed that Pseudomonas savastanoi had sufficient genetic distinction from P. syringae to merit its own species classification. Several pathovars were subsequently attributed to P. savastanoi, including P. savastanoi pv. savastanoi, P. savastanoi pv. glycinea, and P. savastanoi pv. phaseolicola (Gardan et al. 1992). Other pathovars have subsequently been recognized, including P. savastanoi pv. fanxini and P. savastanoi pv. nerii.


Host range and susceptibility
Cultivated and wild olives (Olea europaea) and ash (Fraxinus excelsior) are susceptible to tumor induction by P. savastanoipv. savastanoi. Other pathovars have different host ranges. For example, P. savastanoipv. nerii infects oleander (Nerium oleander) but can also infect olives. P. savastanoi pv. savastanoi has been shown to infect oleander, but the occurrence is unusual (Ramos et al. 2012). Though P. savastanoi pv. savastanoi is generally limited to olive and oleander hosts, there is a recent report of a
P. savastanoiinfection on Mandevilla sanderi, commonly known as Brazilian jasmine (Eltlbany et al. 2012). There are several other pathogenic pathovars. P. savastanoi pv. glycinea infects soybeans and P. savastanoi pv. phaseolicola is responsible for halo blight in beans (Gardan et al. 1992).
Resistant olive cultivars are rare, though susceptibility to P. savastanoidoes vary. Young olive plants are particularly non-resistant to infection (Penyalver et al. 2006). P. savastanoican be epiphytic upon infection (Rodriguez-Moreno et al. 2009).

Mechanisms of Virulence


Plant hormones: cytokinin and IAA
Infection by Pseudomonas savastanoi causes cavities in host cells in which bacteria can aggregate (Marchi et al. 2009). P. savastanoi also accumulate in the xylem, which suggests a mechanism, heretofore unverified, of bacterial transport throughout the plant (Rodriguez-Moreno et al. 2009).
Plant hormones are one aspect of virulence that activates tumorigenesis. Cytokinin and IAA production both contribute to knot formation by interfering with endogenous signals to induce rapid proliferation of host cells at the site of infection (Surico et al. 1985, Marchi et al. 2009, and Sisto et al. 2004). Pseudomonas savastanoi carry plasmids that encode for indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), a protein involved in auxin signaling (Surico et al. 1985 and Muto et al. 2007). Various genetic studies confirm the importance of IAA and cytokinins for virulence. Mutants lacking either IAA or cytokinins were less symptomatic upon infection of a host olive plant. Infections were limited to some of the normal occurrences, such as leaf necrosis and stem swelling. Tumor induction can be induced by only IAA, though cytokinins also play an important role (Iacobellis 1994). Strains lacking the pIAA1 plasmid, which encodes for the two genes responsible for IAA production, iaaM and iaaH, fail to induce olive knot growth in hosts plants (Spaepen and Vanderleyden 2010). Auxin may be important for virulence by downregulating factors that contribute to the host defense. For example, auxin can protect against the hypersensitive response, a defense mchanism in plants injected with P. syringae (Melotto and Kunkel 2013). HR is a form of programmed cell death in host cells and is widely conserved among plants and animals (Grant et al. 2006). Auxin has many additional roles. It may regulate gene expression or affect the physiology of host cells, for example (Melotto and Kunkel 2013).
P. savastanoi occur in conjunction with other bacterial species within olive knots. It is hypothesized that phytohormones produced by the nonpathogenic bacteria coexisting in olive knots may influence P. savastanoi (Ramos et al. 2012). Auxin is produced by a variety of other genera and species that are common to olive knots, including Stenotrophomonas maltophila, Pantoea agglomerans, Pantoea oleae, Burkholderia cepacia, and Hafrnia alvei, all of which are other Gram-negative rod forming bacteria. Furthermore, IAA specifically is produced by other Pseudomonas species (Ouzari et al. 2008).
Suppressing host immune response and defense mechanisms
The P. Syringae complex, composed of the hrp/hrc gene cluster, acts on host the immune system (Grant et al. 2006 and Sisto et al. 2004). Defense mechanisms in plants involve mechanical resistance to pathogens through the cell wall. Additionally, plants contain a set of receptors that respond to microbe-associated molecular patterns and induce the production of antimicrobial agents (Grant et al. 2006). The hrp genes encode for a type III protein secretion system (T3SS). The T3SS is comprised of a pilus that connects the bacterium with the host membrane and the pore that forms in the host cell to allow entry of type III effector proteins (Grant et al. 2006). T3SS are found in Gram-negative bacteria that interact eukaryotes, both as pathogens or symbionts, such as nitrogen-fixing Rhizobium (Gazi et al. 2012). The complex can overcome plant cell walls with the aid of helper proteins that are secreted into the extracellular space (Grant et al. 2006). Host cell wall degradation has been observed in in olive knots (Rodriguez-Moreno et al. 2009). All of the proteins associated with the T3SS are encoded for in the P. Syringae pathogenicity island (Grant et al. 2006). The T3SS proteins evolved from a common ancestor and the genomic island encoding all of the associated proteins was transferred horizontally among seven families. P. savastanoi and other Pseudomonads exhibit the Hrc-Hrp2-T3SS family. The other genera that share T3SS-2 are Erwinia, Ralstonia, and Xanthomonas (Gazi et al. 2012).

General mechanism of Type III Secretion System (T3SS) in plant pathogens. (Melotto and Kunkel 2013)


P. savastanoi contain the hrp/hrc gene cluster that encodes for the TTSS and related proteins (Grant et al. 2006). One emerging area of research is understanding the specific effectors and other elements of the T3SS (Rodriguez-Palenzuela et al. 2010). The gene clusters are essential to P. savastanoi virulence and may be more important pathologically than auxin and cytokinin action. The hrp gene cluster reduces plant vitality by inducing leakage of essential nutrients into the extracellular milieu, in addition to its roles inhibiting the plant immune system. The closely related hrc genes are responsible for the plant HR (Sisto et al. 2004). HR is a form of programmed cell death in host cells and is widely conserved among plants and animals (Grant et al. 2006).
In addition to the T3SS, other interactions with host defense mechanisms have been postulated. Plants produce a range of secondary metabolites that aid in defense. Flavonoids are one class of phenolic compounds that are protective against parasites and pathogens (Treutter 2005). Flavonoids, along with other phenolic compounds like secoiridoids and lignans are common to olive oil and confer some of the major health benefits associated with the Mediterranean diet (Christophoridou et al. 2005 and Alarcon de la Lastra et al. 2001). Sequence data and empirical evidence in P. savastanoi reveals the potential for phenol catabolism. Other pathogens of woody plants, in which phenolic defense mechanisms are common, show similar catabolic abilities (Rodriguez-Palenzuela 2010). Furthermore, olive knots induced by P. savastanoi pv. savastanoi show a higher presence of phenolic compounds than in other leafs and shoots (Cayuela 2005). Thus, P. savastanoi may circumvent the the secondary metabolites produced by plants to preempt and actively combat bacterial infections by catabolizing the compounds (Rodriguez-Palenzuela 2010).
Emerging views of virulence: signaling mechanisms and outer membrane vesicles

Visualization of outer membrane vesicles, which help facilitate P. savastanoi pathogenicity. (left)Knot tissue invaded by P. savastanoi microbes. (right) Release of outer membrane vesicles forming from host cell. Modified from Pérez-Martínez et al. 2010


The P. savastanoi signaling mechanism is another quality that has been implicated in its virulence. Gram-negative bacteria commonly use N-acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) signaling molecules. P. savastanoi commonly occurs in association with P. agglomerans and E. toletana, which are both nonpathogenic Enterobacteriaceae that frequently grow at olive knot infection sites (Hosni et al. 2011). In general, plants that have been inoculated with P. savastanoi have a higher overall bacteria population than plants that do not bear an infection by P. savastanoi (Quesada et al. 2009). AHL signals can be shared across P. agglomerans, E. toletana, and P. savastanoi. Specifically, the association of E. toletana and P. savastanoi confers synergistic pathogenic effects. The interactions between E. toletana and P. savastanoi are stable and lead to an incidence of greater olive knot formation (Hosni et al. 2011). Alternatively, interactions between P. savastanoi and resident microbial communities on host plants may negatively impact bacterial virulence (Hosni et al. 2011 and Dulla and Lindow 2009). The pathogenicity of P. Syringae pv. syringae, which is closely related species to P. savastanoi pathovars, was reduced by crosstalk with signaling molecules from the resident bacterial populations. Instead of synergistic effects, the AHLs from other species interfered with AHL signaling in P. Syringae (Dulla and Lindow 2009). Researchers are working on exploiting the interactions between resident populations and P. savastanoi to reduce its incidence and virulence (Krid et al. 2011).
Additionally, P. savastanoi employ a unique mechanism for plant pathogens by inducing the release of outer membrane vesicles form the host cell. Animal pathogens commonly release outer membrane vesicles for transporting virulence factors into host cells. Their role in P. savastanoi infection may be a relating to correcting for osmotic pressure (Perez-Martinez et al. 2010).
Development of Genetic Tools for Understanding Virulence Major advances in the last several years have rapidly progressed the understanding of P. savastanoi after decades of stalled research. Before 2007, the significant impediment to studying P. savastanoi was the lack of any strains that were amenable to genetic manipulation, specifically conjugation. The problem is consistent across other Pseudomonads that infect woody plants, including P. savastanoi pvs. Savastanoi, franxini, and nerii. Several strains were isolated that are have more efficient transformations (Perez-Martinez 2007). One of the strains with the highest transformation efficiency, P. savastanoi pv. savastanoi NCPPB 3335, was recently sequenced (Perez-Martinez 2007 and Rodriguez-Palenzuela et al. 2010). A draft genome was obtained with pyrosequencing and compared to other published P. Syringae genomes. The primary goal of the genetic manipulation is to augment the current poor understanding of P. savastanoi virulence (Rodriguez-Palenzuela et al. 2010).
The draft genome of P. savastanoi pv. savastanoi NCPPB 3335 revealed 73 genes that are not found in other species as well as eight gene inversions in comparison with closely related species. Researchers suggest that the basis for host specificity is encoded for in the 73 genes unique to P. savastanoi (Silby et al. 2011 and Rodriguez-Palenzuela et al. 2010).
Other emerging techniques have recently allowed for easier plant manipulation and greater resolution. For example, cultivation by micropropagation circumvents the arduous growing requirements for olive trees, including long growing seasons and large plant size. Additionally, the draft P. savastanoi pv. savastanoi NCPPB 3335 genome has been employed to develop a green fluorescent protein tagging system. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy can be used to visualize the bacteria in planta and further elucidate virulence mechanisms (Ramos et al.2012).

Section 2


Include some current research, with at least one figure showing data.

Section 3


Include some current research, with at least one figure showing data.

Conclusion


Overall text length at least 3,000 words, with at least 3 figures.

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Edited by student of Joan Slonczewski for BIOL 238 Microbiology, 2011, Kenyon College.