Affiliation:
1. Unité de Microbiologie et Génétique CNRS-INSA-UCB UMR 5122, INSA, 69621 Villeurbanne Cedex
2. Laboratoire de Pathologie Végétale, UMR 217 INRA/INA P-G/Université Paris 6, 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In the plant-pathogenic bacterium
Erwinia chrysanthemi
production of pectate lyases, the main virulence determinant, is modulated by a complex network involving several regulatory proteins. One of these regulators, PecS, also controls the synthesis of a blue pigment identified as indigoidine. Since production of this pigment is cryptic in the wild-type strain,
E. chrysanthemi ind
mutants deficient in indigoidine synthesis were isolated by screening a library of Tn
5
-B21 insertions in a
pecS
mutant. These
ind
mutations were localized close to the regulatory
pecS-pecM
locus, immediately downstream of
pecM
. Sequence analysis of this DNA region revealed three open reading frames,
indA
,
indB
, and
indC
, involved in indigoidine biosynthesis. No specific function could be assigned to IndA. In contrast, IndB displays similarity to various phosphatases involved in antibiotic synthesis and IndC reveals significant homology with many nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS). The IndC product contains an adenylation domain showing the signature sequence DAWCFGLI for glutamine recognition and an oxidation domain similar to that found in various thiazole-forming NRPS. These data suggest that glutamine is the precursor of indigoidine. We assume that indigoidine results from the condensation of two glutamine molecules that have been previously cyclized by intramolecular amide bond formation and then dehydrogenated. Expression of
ind
genes is strongly derepressed in the
pecS
background, indicating that PecS is the main regulator of this secondary metabolite synthesis. DNA band shift assays support a model whereby the PecS protein represses
indA
and
indC
expression by binding to
indA
and
indC
promoter regions. The regulatory link, via
pecS
, between indigoidine and virulence factor production led us to explore a potential role of indigoidine in
E. chrysanthemi
pathogenicity. Mutants impaired in indigoidine production were unable to cause systemic invasion of potted
Saintpaulia ionantha
. Moreover, indigoidine production conferred an increased resistance to oxidative stress, indicating that indigoidine may protect the bacteria against the reactive oxygen species generated during the plant defense response.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Reference48 articles.
1. Basic local alignment search tool
2. Ausubel F. M. R. Brent R. E. Kingston D. D. Moore J. G. Seidman J. A. Smith and K. Struhl (ed.). 1987. Current protocols in molecular biology. Wiley-Interscience New York N.Y.
3. Bardonnet, N., and C. Blanco. 1992. uidA antibiotic resistance cassettes for insertion mutagenesis, gene fusion and genetic constructions. FEMS Microbiol. Lett.93:243–248.
4. Linkage Map of
Escherichia coli
K-12, Edition 10: The Traditional Map
5. Boccara M. S. Tandon and A. d’Harlingue. 1994. Studies of Erwinia chrysanthemi interactions with plant tissue culture cells abstr. 176 p.58. In Proceedings of the Seventh International Symposium on Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions Edinburgh Scotland 26 June to 1 July 1994.
Cited by
165 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