David L. Coplin
Ohio State University
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Trends in Microbiology | 1996
Peter R. Reeves; Matthew Hobbs; Miguel A. Valvano; Mikael Skurnik; Chris Whitfield; David L. Coplin; Nobuo Kido; John D. Klena; Duncan J. Maskell; Christian R. H. Raetz; Paul D. Rick
Gene nomenclature for bacterial surface polysaccharides is complicated by the large number of structures and genes. We propose a scheme applicable to all species that distinguishes different classes of genes, provides a single name for all genes of a given function and greatly facilitates comparative studies.
Molecular Microbiology | 1996
Adam J. Bogdanove; Steven V. Beer; Ulla Bonas; Christian Boucher; Alan Collmer; David L. Coplin; Guy R. Cornelis; Hsiou-Chen Huang; Steven W. Hutcheson; Nickolas J. Panopoulos; Frédérique Van Gijsegem
Genes of plant-pathogenic bacteria controlling hypersensitive response (HR) elicitation and pathogenesis were designated ‘hrp’ by Lindgren et al. in 1986 (J Bacteriol 168: 512–522). hrp genes have been characterized in several species of the four major genera of Gramnegative plant pathogens, Erwinia, Pseudomonas, Ralstonia (a new proposed genus including Pseudomonas solanacearum) and Xanthomonas. To date, hrp genes have been found mainly in large clusters, and they have been shown to be conserved physically and, in many cases, functionally among different bacteria. Hybridization studies and genetic analyses have revealed the presence of functional hrp genes even in species that are not typically observed to elicit an HR, such as Erwinia chrysanthemi and Erwinia stewartii, suggesting that hrp genes may be common to all Gram-negative plant pathogens, possibly excluding Agrobacterium spp. Current knowledge of hrp genes has been reviewed by Bonas (1994, Curr Top Microbiol Immunol 192: 79–98) and by Van Gijsegem et al. (1995, In Pathogenesis and Host–Parasite Specificity in Plant Diseases: Histopathological, Biochemical, Genetic and Molecular Basis. Volume 1. (Kohmoto et al., eds); Oxford: Pergamon Press, pp. 273–292). The nucleotide sequences of four hrp gene clusters, those of Ralstonia solanacearum (previously P. solanacearum) (Genin et al., 1992, Mol Microbiol 6: 3065–3076; Gough et al., 1992, Mol Plant–Microbe Interact 5: 384–389; Gough et al., 1993, Mol Gen Genet 239: 378–392; Van Gijsegem et al., 1995, Mol Microbiol 15: 1095–1114), Erwinia amylovora (Bogdanove et al., 1996, J Bacteriol 178: 1720– 1730; Wei and Beer, 1993, J Bacteriol 175: 7958–7967; Wei and Beer, 1995, J Bacteriol 177: 6201–6210; Wei et al., 1992, Science 257: 85–88; S. V. Beer, unpublished), Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae (Huang et al., 1992, J Bacteriol 174: 6878–6885; Huang et al., 1993, Mol Plant–Microbe Interact 6: 515–520; Huang et al., 1995, Mol Plant–Microbe Interact 8: 733–746; Lidell and Hutcheson, 1994, Mol Plant–Microbe Interact 7: 488–497; Preston et al., 1995, Mol Plant–Microbe Interact 8: 717–732; Xiao et al., 1994, J Bacteriol 176: 1025–1036), and Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria (Fenselau et al., 1992, Mol Plant–Microbe Interact 5: 390–396; Fenselau and Bonas, 1995, Mol Plant–Microbe Interact 8: 845–854; U. Bonas, unpublished), have been largely determined. These clusters each contain more than twenty genes, many of which encode components of a novel proteinsecretion pathway designated ‘type III’. It has been shown directly that various extracellular proteins involved in pathogenesis and defence elicitation by plantpathogenic bacteria utilize this pathway (Arlat et al., 1994, EMBO J 13: 543–553; He et al., 1993, Cell 73: 1255–1266; Wei and Beer, 1993, ibid.), and the pathway is known to function in the export of virulence factors from the animal pathogens Salmonella typhimurium, Shigella flexneri, and Yersinia entercolitica, Yersinia pestis, and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (for reviews, see Salmond and Reeves, 1993, Trends Biochem Sci 18: 7–12; and Van Gijsegem et al., 1993, Trends Microbiol 1: 175– 180). Nine type III secretion genes are conserved among all four of the plant pathogens listed above and among the animal pathogens. Based on sequence analysis and some experimental evidence, they are believed to encode one outer-membrane protein, one outer-membrane-associated lipoprotein, five inner-membrane proteins, and two cytoplasmic proteins, one of which is a putative ATPase. All of the predicted gene products, except the outer-membrane protein, show significant similarity to components of the flagellar biogenesis complex (for reviews see Blair, 1995, Annu Rev Microbiol 49: 489–522; and Bischoff and Ordal, 1992, Mol Microbiol 6: 23–28). We herein refer to the hrp-encoded type III pathway as the ‘Hrp pathway’. Because hrp genes have been characterized independently in diverse plant-pathogenic bacteria, hrp gene nomenclature differs in different species, and it is not always consistent even within the same organism. Different designations are used for homologous genes, and, even worse, the same designation is used for different genes in different organisms. For example, hrpI of E. amylovora is homologous with hrpC2 of X. campestris pv. vesicatoria and hrpO of R. solanacearum, and the homologue in P. syringae pv. syringae appears in the literature both as hrpI and as hrpJ2. Also, ‘hrpN ’ in R. solanacearum designates a secretion-pathway gene, whereas in E. amylovora, ‘hrpN ’ designates the gene encoding the elicitor harpin. Furthermore, in many bacteria the number of known hrp genes approaches 26. In anticipation of exhausting the alphabet, some authors chose to designate hrp genes with a letter and a number, creating the potential for confusion of distinct genes with alleles of the same gene. For hrp gene researchers, the current nomenclature is at best inconvenient; for other scientists, it is bewildering. Another problem exists: accumulation of knowledge about the structure of hrp loci has outpaced the accumulation of Molecular Microbiology (1996) 20(3), 681–683
Carbohydrate Research | 1996
Manfred Nimtz; Andrew J. Mort; Tobias Domke; Victor Wray; Yongxiang Zhang; Feng Qiu; David L. Coplin; Klaus Geider
The acidic exopolysaccharide (EPS) of Erwinia amylovora, amylovoran, was purified from culture supernatants of bacteria in minimal medium and cleaved chemically either by treatment with trifluoracetic acid or hydrofluoric acid, and enzymatically by digestion with depolymerase from E. amylovora phage phi-Ealh. Structural characterization of the resulting oligosaccharides was performed by a combination of mass spectrometric and NMR [one- and two-dimensional (1D and 2D)] spectroscopic techniques. A branched repeating unit with five monosaccharide residues and various substituents was determined: [sequence: see text] The terminal monosaccharide of the side branch, which bears a 4,6-bound pyruvate residue in the R-configuration, was found to be modified with 2-linked (26%), 3-linked (24%), 2-,3-linked (40%) O-acetyl groups, or these were absent (10%). An additional glucose residue is linked to approximately 10% of the core alpha-galactose of the repeating unit.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2001
Reid D. Frederick; Musharaf Ahmad; Doris R. Majerczak; Angel S. Arroyo-Rodríguez; Shulamit Manulis; David L. Coplin
The hrp/wts gene cluster of Pantoea stewartii subsp. stewartii is required for pathogenicity on sweet corn and the ability to elicit a hypersensitive response (HR) in tobacco. Site-directed transposon mutagenesis and nucleotide sequencing were used to identify hrp/wts genes within the left 20 kb of this cluster. Seventeen open reading frames (ORFs) comprise seven genetic complementation groups. These ORFs share homology with hrp and dsp genes from Erwinia amylovora, Erwinia chrysanthemi, and Pseudomonas syringae pathovars and have been designated, in map order, wtsF, wtsE, hrpN, hrpV, hrpT, hrcC, hrpG, hrpF, hrpE, hrpD, hrcJ, hrpB, hrpA, hrpS, hrpY, hrpX, and hrpL. Putative hrp consensus promoter sequences were identified upstream of hrpA, hrpF, hrpN, and wtsE. Expression of the hrpA, hrpC, and wtsE operons was regulated by HrpS. Transposon mutations in all of the hrp operons abolished pathogenicity and HR elicitation, except for the hrpN and hrpV mutants, which were still pathogenic. hrpS, hrpXY, and hrpL regulatory mutations abolished HrpN synthesis, whereas secretory mutations in the hrpC, hrpA, and hrpJ operons permitted intracellular HrpN synthesis. wtsEF mutants were not pathogenic but still produced HrpN and elicited the HR. wtsE encodes a 201-kDa protein that is similar to DspE in E. amylovora and AvrE in P. syringae pv. tomato, suggesting that this protein is a major virulence factor involved in the elicitation of water-soaked lesions.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1993
Frank Bernhard; David L. Coplin; Klaus Geider
A large ams gene cluster required for production of the acidic extracellular polysaccharide (EPS) amylovoran by the fire blight pathogen Erwinia amylovora was cloned. Tn5 mutagenesis and gene replacement were used to construct chromosomal ams mutants. Five complementation groups, essential for amylovoran synthesis and virulence in E. amylovora, were identified and designated amsA-E. The ams gene cluster is about 7 kb in size and functionally equivalent to the cps gene cluster involved in EPS synthesis by the related pathogen Erwinia stewartii. Mucoidy and virulence were restored to E. stewartii mutants in four cps complementation groups by the cloned E. amylovora ams genes. Conversely, the E. stewartii cps gene cluster was able to complement mutations in E. amylovora ams genes. Correspondence was found between the amsA-E complementation groups and the cpsB-D region, but the arrangement of the genes appears to be different. EPS production and virulence were also restored to E. amylovora amsE and E. stewartii cpsD mutants by clones containing the Rhizobium meliloti exoA gene.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
Markus Wehland; Clemens Kiecker; David L. Coplin; Olaf Kelm; Wolfram Saenger; Frank Bernhard
The regulation of capsule synthesis (Rcs) regulatory network is responsible for the induction of exopolysaccharide biosynthesis in many enterobacterial species. We have previously shown that two transcriptional regulators, RcsA and RcsB, do bind as a heterodimer to the promoter of amsG, the first reading frame in the operon for amylovoran biosynthesis in the plant pathogenic bacterium Erwinia amylovora. We now identified a 23-base pair fragment from position −555 to −533 upstream of the translational start site of amsG as sufficient for the specific binding of the Rcs proteins. In addition, we could detect an RcsA/RcsB-binding site in a corresponding region of the promoter ofcpsA, the homologous counterpart to the E. amylovora amsG gene in the operon for stewartan biosynthesis ofPantoea stewartii. The specificity and characteristic parameters of the protein-DNA interaction were analyzed by DNA retardation, protein-DNA cross-linking, and directed mutagenesis. The central core motif TRVGAAWAWTSYG of the amsG promoter was found to be most important for the specific interaction with RcsA/RcsB, as evaluated by mutational analysis and an in vitroselection approach. The wild type P. stewartii Rcs binding motif is degenerated in two positions and an up-mutation according to our consensus motif resulted in about a 5-fold increased affinity of the RcsA/RcsB proteins.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2003
Massimo Merighi; Doris R. Majerczak; Elizabeth H. Stover; David L. Coplin
A regulatory cascade activating hrp/hrc type III secretion and effector genes was delineated in Pantoea stewartii subsp. stewartii, a bacterial pathogen of corn. Four hrp regulatory genes were characterized: hrpX and hrpY encode the sensor kinase and response regulator, respectively, of a two-component signal transduction system; hrpS encodes an NtrC-like transcriptional enhancer; and hrpL encodes an alternative sigma factor. Epistasis analysis, expression studies using gene fusions, and genetic reconstruction of each step in Escherichia coli were used to delineate the following pathway: HrpY activates hrpS and also positively autoregulates the hrpXY operon. In turn, HrpS is required for full activation of the sigma54-dependent hrpL promoter. Finally, HrpL controls expression of all known hrp and wts genes. In vitro, hrpS and all downstream hrp genes were regulated by pH and salt concentration. Mutants with in-frame deletions in hrpX were still partially virulent on corn but were unable to sense the chemical or metabolic signals that induce hrp genes in vitro. Site-directed mutagenesis of HrpY indicated that aspartate 57 is the probable phosphorylation site and that it is needed for activity. These findings suggest that both HrpX and an alternate mechanism are involved in the activation of HrpY in planta.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2006
Jong Hyun Ham; Doris R. Majerczak; Angel S. Arroyo-Rodríguez; David Mackey; David L. Coplin
The pathogenicity of Pantoea stewartii subsp. stewartii to sweet corn and maize requires a Hrp type III secretion system. In this study, we genetically and functionally characterized a disease-specific (Dsp) effector locus, composed of wtsE and wtsF, that is adjacent to the hrp gene cluster. WtsE, a member of the AvrE family of effector proteins, was essential for pathogenesis on corn and was complemented by DspA/E from Erwinia amylovora. An intact C-terminus of WtsE, which contained a putative endoplasmic reticulum membrane retention signal, was important for function of WtsE. Delivery of WtsE into sweet corn leaves by an Escherichia coli strain carrying the hrp cluster of Erwinia chrysanthemi caused water-soaking and necrosis. WtsE-induced cell death was not inhibited by cycloheximide treatment, unlike the hypersensitive response caused by a known Avr protein, AvrRxol. WtsF, the putative chaperone of WtsE, was not required for secretion of WtsE from P. stewartii, and the virulence of wtsF mutants was reduced only at low inoculum concentrations. However, WtsF was required for full accumulation of WtsE within the bacteria at low temperatures. In contrast, WtsF was needed for efficient delivery of WtsE from E. coli via the Erwinia chrysanthemi Hrp system.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2012
Valdir R. Correa; Doris R. Majerczak; El-Desouky Ammar; Massimo Merighi; Richard C. Pratt; Saskia A. Hogenhout; David L. Coplin; Margaret G. Redinbaugh
ABSTRACT Plant- and animal-pathogenic bacteria utilize phylogenetically distinct type III secretion systems (T3SS) that produce needle-like injectisomes or pili for the delivery of effector proteins into host cells. Pantoea stewartii subsp. stewartii (herein referred to as P. stewartii), the causative agent of Stewarts bacterial wilt and leaf blight of maize, carries phylogenetically distinct T3SSs. In addition to an Hrc-Hrp T3SS, known to be essential for maize pathogenesis, P. stewartii has a second T3SS (Pantoea secretion island 2 [PSI-2]) that is required for persistence in its flea beetle vector, Chaetocnema pulicaria (Melsh). PSI-2 belongs to the Inv-Mxi-Spa T3SS family, typically found in animal pathogens. Mutagenesis of the PSI-2 psaN gene, which encodes an ATPase essential for secretion of T3SS effectors by the injectisome, greatly reduces both the persistence of P. stewartii in flea beetle guts and the beetles ability to transmit P. stewartii to maize. Ectopic expression of the psaN gene complements these phenotypes. In addition, the PSI-2 psaN gene is not required for P. stewartii pathogenesis of maize and is transcriptionally upregulated in insects compared to maize tissues. Thus, the Hrp and PSI-2 T3SSs play different roles in the life cycle of P. stewartii as it alternates between its insect vector and plant host.
Plant Disease | 2002
David L. Coplin; Doris R. Majerczak; Yongxiang Zhang; Won-Sik Kim; Susanne Jock; Klaus Geider
Stewarts bacterial wilt and leaf blight of sweet corn and maize is caused by Pantoea stewartii subsp. stewartii. This bacterium can be seed transmitted at a low frequency, so it is subject to quarantine restrictions by many countries. To develop a polymerase chain reaction assay for the identification of this pathogen from field samples and for use in seed health tests, four primer pairs were tested. These were selected from the sequences of hrpS, cpsDE, and the 16S rRNA intergenic transcribed spacer (ITS) region. Under optimal reaction conditions, about 20 and 200 cells of P. stewartii could be detected in pure cultures and leaf lesions, respectively. Other plant-associated enteric bacteria (e.g., P. agglomerans pv. herbicola, P. ananas, Erwinia amylovora, and E. carotovora) either did not produce amplicons or they were not the correct size for P. stewartii. To test further for possible false positives, 29 yellow-pigmented bacteria, mainly other Pantoea spp., were isolated from lesions on old corn leaves and assayed with the ITS primer sets. Except for weak, variable reactions with three P. ananas strains, the bacteria did not test positive. Pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) was evaluated as an additional test to confirm the identity of P. stewartii. After digestion with SpeI and XbaI, P. stewartii strains could be easily distinguished from related Erwinia and Pantoea spp. and each other.