Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Pathology
2. Fakultät für Biologie, Lehrstuhl für Mikrobiologie/Gentechnologie, Universitaetsstrasse 25, D-33615 Bielefeld, Germany
3. Food Animal Health Research Program, Ohio Agricultural Research Development Center, Ohio State University, Wooster, Ohio 44691
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Clavibacter michiganensis
subsp.
michiganensis
is a Gram-positive bacterium that causes wilting and cankers, leading to severe economic losses in commercial tomato production worldwide. The disease is transmitted from infected seeds to seedlings and mechanically from plant to plant during seedling production, grafting, pruning, and harvesting. Because of the lack of tools for genetic manipulation, very little is known regarding the mechanisms of seed and seedling infection and movement of
C. michiganensis
subsp.
michiganensis
in grafted plants, two focal points for application of bacterial canker control measures in tomato. To facilitate studies on the
C. michiganensis
subsp.
michiganensis
movement in tomato seed and grafted plants, we isolated a bioluminescent
C. michiganensis
subsp.
michiganensis
strain using the modified Tn
1409
containing a promoterless
lux
reporter. A total of 19 bioluminescent
C. michiganensis
subsp.
michiganensis
mutants were obtained. All mutants tested induced a hypersensitive response in
Mirabilis jalapa
and caused wilting of tomato plants. Real-time colonization studies of germinating seeds using a virulent, stable, constitutively bioluminescent strain, BL-Cmm17, showed that
C. michiganensis
subsp.
michiganensis
aggregated on hypocotyls and cotyledons at an early stage of germination. In grafted seedlings in which either the rootstock or scion was exposed to BL-Cmm17 via a contaminated grafting knife, bacteria were translocated in both directions from the graft union at higher inoculum doses. These results emphasize the use of bioluminescent
C. michiganensis
subsp.
michiganensis
to help better elucidate the
C. michiganensis
subsp.
michiganensis
-tomato plant interactions. Further, we demonstrated the broader applicability of this tool by successful transformation of
C. michiganensis
subsp.
nebraskensis
with Tn
1409
::
lux
. Thus, our approach would be highly useful to understand the pathogenesis of diseases caused by other subspecies of the agriculturally important
C. michiganensis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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