Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Pathology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ralstonia solanacearum
is a soilborne pathogen that causes bacterial wilt of diverse plant species. To locate and infect host plant roots
R. solanacearum
needs taxis, the ability to move toward more favorable conditions. However, the specific signals that attract this pathogen were unknown. One candidate is aerotaxis, or energy taxis, which guides bacteria toward optimal intracellular energy levels. The
R. solanacearum
genome encodes two putative aerotaxis transducers. Cloned
R. solanacearum aer1
and
aer2
genes restored aerotaxis to an
Escherichia coli aer
mutant, demonstrating that both genes encode heterologously functional aerotaxis transducers. Site-directed mutants lacking
aer1
,
aer2
, or both
aer1
and
aer2
were significantly less able to move up an oxygen gradient than the wild-type parent strain; in fact, the aerotaxis of the
aer
mutants was indistinguishable from that of a completely nonmotile strain. Tomato plants inoculated with either the
aer2
or the
aer1/aer2
mutant had slightly delayed wilt disease development. Furthermore, the
aer1/aer2
double mutant was significantly impaired in the ability to rapidly localize on tomato roots compared to its wild-type parent. Unexpectedly, all nonaerotactic mutants formed thicker biofilms on abiotic surfaces than the wild type. These results indicate that energy taxis contributes significantly to the ability of
R. solanacearum
to locate and effectively interact with its host plants.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
131 articles.
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