Affiliation:
1. Department
of Botany, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Pseudomonas
syringae
is a common foliar bacterium responsible for many
important plant diseases. We studied the population structure and
dynamics of the core genome of
P. syringae
via multilocus
sequencing typing (MLST) of 60 strains, representing 21 pathovars and 2
nonpathogens, isolated from a variety of plant hosts. Seven
housekeeping genes, dispersed around the
P. syringae
genome,
were sequenced to obtain 400 to 500 nucleotides per gene. Forty unique
sequence types were identified, with most strains falling into one of
four major clades. Phylogenetic and maximum-likelihood analyses
revealed a remarkable degree of congruence among the seven genes,
indicating a common evolutionary history for the seven loci. MLST and
population genetic analyses also found a very low level of
recombination. Overall, mutation was found to be approximately four
times more likely than recombination to change any single nucleotide. A
skyline plot was used to study the demographic history of
P.
syringae
. The species was found to have maintained a constant
population size over time. Strains were also found to remain
genetically homogeneous over many years, and when isolated from sites
as widespread as the United States and Japan. An analysis of molecular
variance found that host association explains only a small proportion
of the total genetic variation in the sample. These analyses reveal
that with respect to the core genome,
P. syringae
is a highly
clonal and stable species that is endemic within plant populations, yet
the genetic variation seen in these genes only weakly predicts host
association.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology