Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Biological Science, College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, California State University, Fullerton, Fullerton, California, USA.
J Bacteriol. 2018 Jun 11;200(13). doi: 10.1128/JB.00665-17. Print 2018 Jul 1.
enters into beneficial symbiotic interactions with species of legumes. Bacterial exopolysaccharides play critical signaling roles in infection thread initiation and growth during the early stages of root nodule formation. After endocytosis of by plant cells in the developing nodule, plant-derived nodule-specific cysteine-rich (NCR) peptides mediate terminal differentiation of the bacteria into nitrogen-fixing bacteroids. Previous transcriptional studies showed that the intensively studied cationic peptide NCR247 induces expression of the genes that encode the proteins required for succinoglycan biosynthesis. In addition, genetic studies have shown that some mutants exhibit increased sensitivity to the antimicrobial action of NCR247. Therefore, we investigated whether the symbiotically active exopolysaccharide succinoglycan can protect against the antimicrobial activity of NCR247. We discovered that high-molecular-weight forms of succinoglycan have the ability to protect from the antimicrobial action of the NCR247 peptide but low-molecular-weight forms of wild-type succinoglycan do not. The protective function of high-molecular-weight succinoglycan occurs via direct molecular interactions between anionic succinoglycan and the cationic NCR247 peptide, but this interaction is not chiral. Taken together, our observations suggest that exopolysaccharides not only may be critical during early stages of nodule invasion but also are upregulated at a late stage of symbiosis to protect bacteria against the bactericidal action of cationic NCR peptides. Our findings represent an important step forward in fully understanding the complete set of exopolysaccharide functions during legume symbiosis. Symbiotic interactions between rhizobia and legumes are economically important for global food production. The legume symbiosis also is a major part of the global nitrogen cycle and is an ideal model system to study host-microbe interactions. Signaling between legumes and rhizobia is essential to establish symbiosis, and understanding these signals is a major goal in the field. Exopolysaccharides are important in the symbiotic context because they are essential signaling molecules during early-stage symbiosis. In this study, we provide evidence suggesting that the exopolysaccharide succinoglycan also protects the bacteria against the antimicrobial action of essential late-stage symbiosis plant peptides.
与豆科植物的 物种形成有益的共生关系。细菌胞外多糖在根瘤形成的早期阶段的感染丝起始和生长中发挥关键的信号作用。在发育中的根瘤中植物细胞内 内吞作用后,植物来源的结节特异性含半胱氨酸丰富(NCR)肽介导细菌向固氮菌的末端分化。以前的转录研究表明,经过深入研究的阳离子肽 NCR247 诱导编码用于琥珀酰聚糖生物合成所需蛋白质的 基因的表达。此外,遗传研究表明,一些 突变体对 NCR247 的抗菌作用表现出更高的敏感性。因此,我们研究了共生活跃的 胞外多糖琥珀酰聚糖是否可以保护 免受 NCR247 肽的抗菌作用。我们发现,高分子量形式的琥珀酰聚糖具有保护 的能力免受 NCR247 肽的抗菌作用,但野生型琥珀酰聚糖的低分子量形式则没有。高分子量琥珀酰聚糖的保护功能是通过阴离子琥珀酰聚糖和阳离子 NCR247 肽之间的直接分子相互作用发生的,但这种相互作用是非手性的。总之,我们的观察结果表明, 胞外多糖不仅在根瘤入侵的早期阶段可能至关重要,而且在共生的后期阶段也被上调,以保护细菌免受阳离子 NCR 肽的杀菌作用。我们的发现代表了在充分理解豆科植物共生过程中完整的胞外多糖功能方面向前迈出的重要一步。根瘤菌与豆科植物之间的共生关系对全球粮食生产具有重要的经济意义。豆科植物共生也是全球氮循环的重要组成部分,也是研究宿主-微生物相互作用的理想模型系统。豆科植物和根瘤菌之间的信号转导对于建立共生关系至关重要,理解这些信号是该领域的主要目标。胞外多糖在共生环境中很重要,因为它们是早期共生阶段的重要信号分子。在这项研究中,我们提供的证据表明, 胞外多糖琥珀酰聚糖还可以保护细菌免受必需的晚期共生植物肽的抗菌作用。