Affiliation:
1. University of Wisconsin—Madison Department of Plant Pathology, 1630 Linden Drive, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ralstonia solanacearum
, an economically important soilborne plant pathogen, infects host roots to cause bacterial wilt disease. However, little is known about this pathogen's behavior in the rhizosphere and early in pathogenesis. In response to root exudates from tomato,
R. solanacearum
strain UW551 upregulated a gene resembling Dps, a nonspecific
D
NA binding
p
rotein from
s
tarved cells that is critical for stress survival in other bacteria. An
R. solanacearum dps
mutant had increased hydrogen peroxide sensitivity and mutation rate under starvation. Furthermore,
dps
expression was positively regulated by the oxidative stress response regulator OxyR. These functional results are consistent with a Dps annotation. The
dps
mutant caused slightly delayed bacterial wilt disease in tomato after a naturalistic soil soak inoculation. However, the
dps
mutant had a more pronounced reduction in virulence when bacteria were inoculated directly into host stems, suggesting that Dps helps
R. solanacearum
adapt to conditions inside plants. Passage through a tomato plant conferred transient increased hydrogen peroxide tolerance on both wild-type and
dps
mutant strains, demonstrating that
R. solanacearum
acquires Dps-independent oxidative stress tolerance during adaptation to the host environment. The
dps
mutant strain was also reduced in adhesion to tomato roots and tomato stem colonization. These results indicate that Dps is important when cells are starved or in stationary phase and that Dps contributes quantitatively to host plant colonization and bacterial wilt virulence. They further suggest that
R. solanacearum
must overcome oxidative stress during the bacterial wilt disease cycle.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
47 articles.
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