UMR077 PaVé, INRA, 42, rue Georges Morel, F-49071 Beaucouzé, France.
BMC Evol Biol. 2011 Mar 11;11:67. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-11-67.
Bacterial plant pathogens belonging to the Xanthomonas genus are tightly adapted to their host plants and are not known to colonise other environments. The host range of each strain is usually restricted to a few host plant species. Bacterial strains responsible for the same type of symptoms on the same host range cluster in a pathovar. The phyllosphere is a highly stressful environment, but it provides a selective habitat and a source of substrates for these bacteria. Xanthomonads colonise host phylloplane before entering leaf tissues and engaging in an invasive pathogenic phase. Hence, these bacteria are likely to have evolved strategies to adapt to life in this environment. We hypothesised that determinants responsible for bacterial host adaptation are expressed starting from the establishment of chemotactic attraction and adhesion on host tissue.
We established the distribution of 70 genes coding sensors and adhesins in a large collection of xanthomonad strains. These 173 strains belong to different pathovars of Xanthomonas spp and display different host ranges. Candidate genes are involved in chemotactic attraction (25 genes), chemical environment sensing (35 genes), and adhesion (10 genes). Our study revealed that candidate gene repertoires comprised core and variable gene suites that likely have distinct roles in host adaptation. Most pathovars were characterized by unique repertoires of candidate genes, highlighting a correspondence between pathovar clustering and repertoires of sensors and adhesins. To further challenge our hypothesis, we tested for molecular signatures of selection on candidate genes extracted from sequenced genomes of strains belonging to different pathovars. We found strong evidence of adaptive divergence acting on most candidate genes.
These data provide insight into the potential role played by sensors and adhesins in the adaptation of xanthomonads to their host plants. The correspondence between repertoires of sensor and adhesin genes and pathovars and the rapid evolution of sensors and adhesins shows that, for plant pathogenic xanthomonads, events leading to host specificity may occur as early as chemotactic attraction by host and adhesion to tissues.
属于黄单胞菌属的细菌植物病原体与宿主植物紧密适应,已知不会在其他环境中定植。每个菌株的宿主范围通常仅限于少数几种宿主植物物种。引起同一宿主范围内相同类型症状的细菌菌株聚集在一个致病变种中。叶围是一个高度应激的环境,但它为这些细菌提供了选择性栖息地和基质来源。黄单胞菌在进入叶片组织并进入侵袭性致病阶段之前,会在宿主叶片表面定殖。因此,这些细菌很可能已经进化出适应这种环境的策略。我们假设负责细菌宿主适应性的决定因素是从在宿主组织上建立化学趋性吸引和黏附开始表达的。
我们在一大组黄单胞菌菌株中建立了 70 个编码传感器和黏附素的基因的分布。这些 173 个菌株属于不同的黄单胞菌致病变种,具有不同的宿主范围。候选基因涉及化学趋性吸引(25 个基因)、化学环境感应(35 个基因)和黏附(10 个基因)。我们的研究表明,候选基因库由核心和可变基因套件组成,这些套件可能在宿主适应中具有不同的作用。大多数致病变种的特征是候选基因的独特基因库,这突出了致病变种聚类与传感器和黏附素基因库之间的对应关系。为了进一步验证我们的假设,我们测试了从属于不同致病变种的菌株测序基因组中提取的候选基因的选择分子特征。我们发现,大多数候选基因都存在强烈的适应性分歧证据。
这些数据为传感器和黏附素在黄单胞菌适应宿主植物中的潜在作用提供了深入了解。传感器和黏附素基因库与致病变种之间的对应关系以及传感器和黏附素的快速进化表明,对于植物病原性黄单胞菌来说,导致宿主特异性的事件可能早在对宿主的趋化吸引和对组织的黏附时就已经发生。