Affiliation:
1. Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The interactions between the economically important plant-pathogenic bacterium
Xylella fastidiosa
and its leafhopper vectors are poorly characterized. We used different approaches to determine how
X. fastidiosa
cells interact with the cuticular surface of the foreguts of vectors. We demonstrate that
X. fastidiosa
binds to different polysaccharides with various affinities and that these interactions are mediated by cell surface carbohydrate-binding proteins. In addition, competition assays showed that
N
-acetylglucosamine inhibits bacterial adhesion to vector foregut extracts and intact wings, demonstrating that attachment to leafhopper surfaces is affected in the presence of specific polysaccharides. In vitro experiments with several
X. fastidiosa
knockout mutants indicated that hemagglutinin-like proteins are associated with cell adhesion to polysaccharides. These results were confirmed with biological experiments in which hemagglutinin-like protein mutants were transmitted to plants by vectors at lower rates than that of the wild type. Furthermore, although these mutants were defective in adhesion to the cuticle of vectors, their growth rate once attached to leafhoppers was similar to that of the wild type, suggesting that these proteins are important for initial adhesion of
X. fastidiosa
to leafhoppers. We propose that
X. fastidiosa
colonization of leafhopper vectors is a complex, stepwise process similar to the formation of biofilms on surfaces.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
84 articles.
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