Baltrus_2011_PLoS.Pathog_7_e1002132

Reference

Title : Dynamic evolution of pathogenicity revealed by sequencing and comparative genomics of 19 Pseudomonas syringae isolates - Baltrus_2011_PLoS.Pathog_7_e1002132
Author(s) : Baltrus DA , Nishimura MT , Romanchuk A , Chang JH , Mukhtar MS , Cherkis K , Roach J , Grant SR , Jones CD , Dangl JL
Ref : PLoS Pathog , 7 :e1002132 , 2011
Abstract :

Closely related pathogens may differ dramatically in host range, but the molecular, genetic, and evolutionary basis for these differences remains unclear. In many Gram- negative bacteria, including the phytopathogen Pseudomonas syringae, type III effectors (TTEs) are essential for pathogenicity, instrumental in structuring host range, and exhibit wide diversity between strains. To capture the dynamic nature of virulence gene repertoires across P. syringae, we screened 11 diverse strains for novel TTE families and coupled this nearly saturating screen with the sequencing and assembly of 14 phylogenetically diverse isolates from a broad collection of diseased host plants. TTE repertoires vary dramatically in size and content across all P. syringae clades; surprisingly few TTEs are conserved and present in all strains. Those that are likely provide basal requirements for pathogenicity. We demonstrate that functional divergence within one conserved locus, hopM1, leads to dramatic differences in pathogenicity, and we demonstrate that phylogenetics-informed mutagenesis can be used to identify functionally critical residues of TTEs. The dynamism of the TTE repertoire is mirrored by diversity in pathways affecting the synthesis of secreted phytotoxins, highlighting the likely role of both types of virulence factors in determination of host range. We used these 14 draft genome sequences, plus five additional genome sequences previously reported, to identify the core genome for P. syringae and we compared this core to that of two closely related non-pathogenic pseudomonad species. These data revealed the recent acquisition of a 1 Mb megaplasmid by a sub-clade of cucumber pathogens. This megaplasmid encodes a type IV secretion system and a diverse set of unknown proteins, which dramatically increases both the genomic content of these strains and the pan-genome of the species.

PubMedSearch : Baltrus_2011_PLoS.Pathog_7_e1002132
PubMedID: 21799664
Gene_locus related to this paper: pse14-q48e33 , psesy-PIP , psesy-PSPTO1504 , psesy-PSPTO2005 , psesy-PSPTO4540 , pseu2-q4zn59 , pseu2-q4zwv7 , psesl-f3een4 , psesx-f3fs74 , psesj-f3g9c5 , psesx-f3h3z5 , pseym-f3hqa6 , pseap-f3ivd6 , psesx-f3jl26 , psesx-w0mwq4

Related information

Gene_locus pse14-q48e33    psesy-PIP    psesy-PSPTO1504    psesy-PSPTO2005    psesy-PSPTO4540    pseu2-q4zn59    pseu2-q4zwv7    psesl-f3een4    psesx-f3fs74    psesj-f3g9c5    psesx-f3h3z5    pseym-f3hqa6    pseap-f3ivd6    psesx-f3jl26    psesx-w0mwq4

Citations formats

Baltrus DA, Nishimura MT, Romanchuk A, Chang JH, Mukhtar MS, Cherkis K, Roach J, Grant SR, Jones CD, Dangl JL (2011)
Dynamic evolution of pathogenicity revealed by sequencing and comparative genomics of 19 Pseudomonas syringae isolates
PLoS Pathog 7 :e1002132

Baltrus DA, Nishimura MT, Romanchuk A, Chang JH, Mukhtar MS, Cherkis K, Roach J, Grant SR, Jones CD, Dangl JL (2011)
PLoS Pathog 7 :e1002132