Affiliation:
1. Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The type III secretion system (T3SS) is a principal virulence determinant of the model bacterial plant pathogen
Pseudomonas syringae
. T3SS effector proteins inhibit plant defense signaling pathways in susceptible hosts and elicit evolved immunity in resistant plants. The extracytoplasmic function sigma factor HrpL coordinates the expression of most T3SS genes. Transcription of
hrpL
is dependent on sigma-54 and the codependent enhancer binding proteins HrpR and HrpS for
hrpL
promoter activation.
hrpL
is oriented adjacently to and divergently from the HrpL-dependent gene
hrpJ
, sharing an intergenic upstream regulatory region. We show that association of the RNA polymerase (RNAP)-HrpL complex with the
hrpJ
promoter element imposes negative autogenous control on
hrpL
transcription in
P. syringae
pv.
tomato
DC3000. The
hrpL
promoter was upregulated in a Δ
hrpL
mutant and was repressed by plasmid-borne
hrpL
. In a minimal
Escherichia coli
background, the activity of HrpL was sufficient to achieve repression of reconstituted
hrpL
transcription. This repression was relieved if both the HrpL DNA-binding function and the
hrp
-box sequence of the
hrpJ
promoter were compromised, implying dependence upon the
hrpJ
promoter. DNA-bound RNAP-HrpL entirely occluded the HrpRS and partially occluded the integration host factor (IHF) recognition elements of the
hrpL
promoter
in vitro
, implicating inhibition of DNA binding by these factors as a cause of negative autogenous control. A modest increase in the HrpL concentration caused hypersecretion of the HrpA1 pilus protein but intracellular accumulation of later T3SS substrates. We argue that negative feedback on HrpL activity fine-tunes expression of the T3SS regulon to minimize the elicitation of plant defenses.
IMPORTANCE
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization has warned that agriculture will need to satisfy a 50% to 70% increase in global food demand if the human population reaches 9 billion by 2050 as predicted. However, diseases caused by microbial pathogens represent a major threat to food security, accounting for over 10% of estimated yield losses in staple wheat, rice, and maize crops. Understanding the decision-making strategies employed by pathogens to coordinate virulence and to evade plant defenses is vital for informing crop resistance traits and management strategies. Many plant-pathogenic bacteria utilize the needle-like T3SS to inject virulence factors into host plant cells to suppress defense signaling.
Pseudomonas syringae
is an economically and environmentally devastating plant pathogen. We propose that the master regulator of its entire T3SS gene set, HrpL, downregulates its own expression to minimize elicitation of plant defenses. Revealing such conserved regulatory strategies will inform future antivirulence strategies targeting plant pathogens.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
23 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献