Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Type IVb pili in enteropathogenic bacteria function as a host colonization factor by mediating tight adherence to host cells, but their role in bacterium-plant symbiosis is currently unknown. The genome of the symbiotic soil bacterium
Sinorhizobium meliloti
contains two clusters encoding proteins for type IVb pili of the Flp (fimbrial low-molecular-weight protein) subfamily. To establish the role of Flp pili in the symbiotic interaction of
S. meliloti
and its host,
Medicago sativa
, we deleted
pilA1
, which encodes the putative pilin subunit in the chromosomal
flp-1
cluster and conducted competitive nodulation assays. The
pilA1
deletion strain formed 27% fewer nodules than the wild type. Transmission electron microscopy revealed the presence of bundle-forming pili protruding from the polar and lateral region of
S. meliloti
wild-type cells. The putative pilus assembly ATPase CpaE1 fused to mCherry showed a predominantly unilateral localization. Transcriptional reporter gene assays demonstrated that expression of
pilA1
peaks in early stationary phase and is repressed by the quorum-sensing regulator ExpR, which also controls production of exopolysaccharides and motility. Binding of acyl homoserine lactone-activated ExpR to the
pilA1
promoter was confirmed with electrophoretic mobility shift assays. A 17-bp consensus sequence for ExpR binding was identified within the 28-bp protected region by DNase I footprinting analyses. Our results show that Flp pili are important for efficient symbiosis of
S. meliloti
with its plant host. The temporal inverse regulation of exopolysaccharides and pili by ExpR enables
S. meliloti
to achieve a coordinated expression of cellular processes during early stages of host interaction.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
20 articles.
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