Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Pathology, University of Wisconsin—Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Plant xylem fluid is considered a nutrient-poor environment, but the bacterial wilt pathogen
Ralstonia solanacearum
is well adapted to it, growing to 10
8
to 10
9
CFU/g tomato stem. To better understand how
R. solanacearum
succeeds in this habitat, we analyzed the transcriptomes of two phylogenetically distinct
R. solanacearum
strains that both wilt tomato, strains UW551 (phylotype II) and GMI1000 (phylotype I). We profiled bacterial gene expression at ~6 × 10
8
CFU/ml in culture or in plant xylem during early tomato bacterial wilt pathogenesis. Despite phylogenetic differences, these two strains expressed their 3,477 common orthologous genes in generally similar patterns, with about 12% of their transcriptomes significantly altered
in planta
versus in rich medium. Several primary metabolic pathways were highly expressed during pathogenesis. These pathways included sucrose uptake and catabolism, and components of these pathways were encoded by genes in the
scrABY
cluster. A UW551
scrA
mutant was significantly reduced in virulence on resistant and susceptible tomato as well as on potato and the epidemiologically important weed host
Solanum dulcamara
. Functional
scrA
contributed to pathogen competitive fitness during colonization of tomato xylem, which contained ~300 µM sucrose.
scrA
expression was induced by sucrose, but to a much greater degree by growth
in planta
. Unexpectedly, 45% of the genes directly regulated by HrpB, the transcriptional activator of the type 3 secretion system (T3SS), were upregulated
in planta
at high cell densities. This result modifies a regulatory model based on bacterial behavior in culture, where this key virulence factor is repressed at high cell densities. The active transcription of these genes in wilting plants suggests that T3SS has a biological role throughout the disease cycle.
IMPORTANCE
Ralstonia solanacearum
is a widespread plant pathogen that causes bacterial wilt disease. It inflicts serious crop losses on tropical farmers, with major economic and human consequences. It is also a model for the many destructive microbes that colonize the water-conducting plant xylem tissue, which is low in nutrients and oxygen. We extracted bacteria from infected tomato plants and globally identified the biological functions that
R. solanacearum
expresses during plant pathogenesis. This revealed the unexpected presence of sucrose in tomato xylem fluid and the pathogen’s dependence on host sucrose for virulence on tomato, potato, and the common weed bittersweet nightshade. Further,
R. solanacearum
was highly responsive to the plant environment, expressing several metabolic and virulence functions quite differently in the plant than in pure culture. These results reinforce the utility of studying pathogens in interaction with hosts and suggest that selecting for reduced sucrose levels could generate wilt-resistant crops.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
164 articles.
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