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Featured researches published by Guoliang Qian.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Biosynthesis of HSAF, a Tetramic Acid-containing Macrolactam from Lysobacter enzymogenes

Lili Lou; Guoliang Qian; Yunxuan Xie; Jiliang Hang; Haotong Chen; Kathia Zaleta-Rivera; Yaoyao Li; Yuemao Shen; Patrick H. Dussault; Fengquan Liu; Liangcheng Du

HSAF was isolated from Lysobacter enzymogenes , a bacterium used in the biological control of fungal diseases of plants. Structurally, it is a tetramic acid-containing macrolactam fused to a tricyclic system. HSAF exhibits a novel mode of action by disrupting sphingolipids important to the polarized growth of filamentous fungi. Here we describe the HSAF biosynthetic gene cluster, which contains only a single-module polyketide synthase/nonribosomal peptide synthetase (PKS/NRPS), although the biosynthesis of HSAF apparently requires two separate polyketide chains that are linked together by one amino acid (ornithine) via two amide bonds. Flanking the PKS/NRPS are six genes that encoding a cascade of four tightly clustered redox enzymes on one side and a sterol desaturase/fatty acid hydroxylase and a ferredoxin reductase on the other side. The genetic data demonstrate that the four redox genes, in addition to the PKS/NRPS gene and the sterol desaturase/fatty acid hydroxylase gene, are required for HSAF production. The biochemical data show that the adenylation domain of the NRPS specifically activates L-ornithine and that the four-domain NRPS is able to catalyze the formation of a tetramic acid-containing product from acyl-S-ACP and ornithinyl-S-NRPS. These results reveal a previously unrecognized biosynthetic mechanism for hybrid PK/NRP in prokaryotic organisms.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2011

Identification and Characterization of the Anti-Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus WAP-8294A2 Biosynthetic Gene Cluster from Lysobacter enzymogenes OH11

Wei Zhang; Yaoyao Li; Guoliang Qian; Yan Wang; Haotong Chen; Yue-zhong Li; Fengquan Liu; Yuemao Shen; Liangcheng Du

ABSTRACT Lysobactor enzymogenes strain OH11 is an emerging biological control agent of fungal and bacterial diseases. We recently completed its genome sequence and found it contains a large number of gene clusters putatively responsible for the biosynthesis of nonribosomal peptides and polyketides, including the previously identified antifungal dihydromaltophilin (HSAF). One of the gene clusters contains two huge open reading frames, together encoding 12 modules of nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS). Gene disruption of one of the NRPS led to the disappearance of a metabolite produced in the wild type and the elimination of its antibacterial activity. The metabolite and antibacterial activity were also affected by the disruption of some of the flanking genes. We subsequently isolated this metabolite and subjected it to spectroscopic analysis. The mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance data showed that its chemical structure is identical to WAP-8294A2, a cyclic lipodepsipeptide with potent anti-methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) activity and currently in phase I/II clinical trials. The WAP-8294A2 biosynthetic genes had not been described previously. So far, the Gram-positive Streptomyces have been the primary source of anti-infectives. Lysobacter are Gram-negative soil/water bacteria that are genetically amendable and have not been well exploited. The WAP-8294A2 synthetase represents one of the largest NRPS complexes, consisting of 45 functional domains. The identification of these genes sets the foundation for the study of the WAP-8294A2 biosynthetic mechanism and opens the door for producing new anti-MRSA antibiotics through biosynthetic engineering in this new source of Lysobacter.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Lysobacter enzymogenes Uses Two Distinct Cell-Cell Signaling Systems for Differential Regulation of Secondary-Metabolite Biosynthesis and Colony Morphology

Guoliang Qian; Yulan Wang; Yiru Liu; Feifei Xu; Ya Wen He; Liangcheng Du; Vittorio Venturi; Jiaqin Fan; Baishi Hu; Fengquan Liu

ABSTRACT Lysobacter enzymogenes is a ubiquitous environmental bacterium that is emerging as a potentially novel biological control agent and a new source of bioactive secondary metabolites, such as the heat-stable antifungal factor (HSAF) and photoprotective polyene pigments. Thus far, the regulatory mechanism(s) for biosynthesis of these bioactive secondary metabolites remains largely unknown in L. enzymogenes. In the present study, the diffusible signal factor (DSF) and diffusible factor (DF)-mediated cell-cell signaling systems were identified for the first time from L. enzymogenes. The results show that both Rpf/DSF and DF signaling systems played critical roles in modulating HSAF biosynthesis in L. enzymogenes. Rpf/DSF signaling and DF signaling played negative and positive effects in polyene pigment production, respectively, with DF playing a more important role in regulating this phenotype. Interestingly, only Rpf/DSF, but not the DF signaling system, regulated colony morphology of L. enzymgenes. Both Rpf/DSF and DF signaling systems were involved in the modulation of expression of genes with diverse functions in L. enzymogenes, and their own regulons exhibited only a few loci that were regulated by both systems. These findings unveil for the first time new roles of the Rpf/DSF and DF signaling systems in secondary metabolite biosynthesis of L. enzymogenes.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

Proteomic Analysis Reveals Novel Extracellular Virulence-Associated Proteins and Functions Regulated by the Diffusible Signal Factor (DSF) in Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola

Guoliang Qian; Yijing Zhou; Yancun Zhao; Zhiwei Song; Suyan Wang; Jiaqin Fan; Baishi Hu; Vittorio Venturi; Fengquan Liu

Quorum sensing (QS) in Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola (Xoc), the causal agent of bacterial leaf streak, is mediated by the diffusible signal factor (DSF). DSF-mediating QS has been shown to control virulence and a set of virulence-related functions; however, the expression profiles and functions of extracellular proteins controlled by DSF signal remain largely unclear. In the present study, 33 DSF-regulated extracellular proteins, whose functions include small-protein mediating QS, oxidative adaptation, macromolecule metabolism, cell structure, biosynthesis of small molecules, intermediary metabolism, cellular process, protein catabolism, and hypothetical function, were identified by proteomics in Xoc. Of these, 15 protein encoding genes were in-frame deleted, and 4 of them, including three genes encoding type II secretion system (T2SS)-dependent proteins and one gene encoding an Ax21 (activator of XA21-mediated immunity)-like protein (a novel small-protein type QS signal) were determined to be required for full virulence in Xoc. The contributions of these four genes to important virulence-associated functions, including bacterial colonization, extracellular polysaccharide, cell motility, biofilm formation, and antioxidative ability, are presented. To our knowledge, our analysis is the first complete list of DSF-regulated extracellular proteins and functions in a Xanthomonas species. Our results show that DSF-type QS played critical roles in regulation of T2SS and Ax21-mediating QS, which sheds light on the role of DSF signaling in Xanthomonas.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2014

Transcriptomic analysis reveals new regulatory roles of Clp signaling in secondary metabolite biosynthesis and surface motility in Lysobacter enzymogenes OH11

Yansheng Wang; Yuxin Zhao; Juan Zhang; Yangyang Zhao; Yan Shen; Zhenhe Su; Gaoge Xu; Liangcheng Du; Justin M. Huffman; Vittorio Venturi; Guoliang Qian; Fengquan Liu

Lysobacter enzymogenes is a bacterial biological control agent emerging as a new source of antibiotic metabolites, such as heat-stable antifungal factor (HSAF) and the antibacterial factor WAP-8294A2. The regulatory mechanism(s) for antibiotic metabolite biosynthesis remains largely unknown in L. enzymogenes. Clp, a cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)-receptor-like protein, is shown to function as a global regulator in modulating biocontrol-associated traits in L. enzymogenes. However, the genetic basis of Clp signaling remains unclear. Here, we utilized transcriptome/microarray analysis to determine the Clp regulon in L. enzymogenes. We showed that Clp is a global regulator in gene expression, as the transcription of 775 genes belonging to 19 functional groups was differentially controlled by Clp signaling. Analysis of the Clp regulon detected previously characterized Clp-modulated functions as well as novel loci. These include novel loci involved in antibiotic metabolite biosynthesis and surface motility in L. enzymogenes. We further showed experimentally that Clp signaling played a positive role in regulating the biosynthesis of HSAF and WAP-8294A2, as well as surface motility which is a type-IV-pilus-dependent trait. The regulation by Clp signaling of antibiotic (HSAF and WAP-8294A2) biosynthesis and surface motility was found to be independent. Importantly, we identified a factor Lysobacter acetyltransferase (Lat), a homologue of histone acetyltransferase Hpa2, which was regulated by Clp and involved in HSAF biosynthesis, but not associated with WAP-8294A2 production and surface motility. Overall, our study provided new insights into the regulatory role and molecular mechanism of Clp signaling in L. enzymogenes.


World Journal of Microbiology & Biotechnology | 2012

Selection of available suicide vectors for gene mutagenesis using chiA (a chitinase encoding gene) as a new reporter and primary functional analysis of chiA in Lysobacter enzymogenes strain OH11

Guoliang Qian; Yansheng Wang; Dongyu Qian; Jiaqin Fan; Baishi Hu; Fengquan Liu

Here, three different suicide vectors were evaluated for the possibility of performing gene mutagenesis in strain OH11 using the chiA gene (accession number: DQ888611) as a new reporter. Suicide vector pEX18GM was selected, and it was successfully applied for disruption and in-frame deletions in the chiA gene in strain OH11, which was confirmed by PCR amplification and Southern hybridization. The chiA-deletion mutant OH11-3 did not have the ability to produce chitinase on chitine selection medium. Interestingly, the chiA-deletion mutants displayed wild-type antimicrobial activity against Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Magnaporthe grisea, Phytophthoracapsici, Rhizoctonia solani, Sclerotinia sclerotiorum and Pythium ultimum. Our data suggest that chitinase might not be a unique lytic enzyme in controlling S. cerevisiae, M. grisea, P. capsici, and P. ultimum. R. solani, S. sclerotiorum. Also, suicide vector pEX18GM might be explored as a potential tool for gene deletions in L. enzymogenes, which will facilitate the molecular study of mechanisms of biological control in L. enzymogenes.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2015

Identification of a Small Molecule Signaling Factor That Regulates the Biosynthesis of the Antifungal Polycyclic Tetramate Macrolactam HSAF in Lysobacter enzymogenes

Yong Han; Yan Wang; Simon Tombosa; Stephen Wright; Justin Huffman; Gary Yuen; Guoliang Qian; Fengquan Liu; Yuemao Shen; Liangcheng Du

Lysobacter species are emerging as new sources of antibiotics. The regulation of these antibiotics is not well understood. Here, we identified a small molecule metabolite (LeDSF3) that regulates the biosynthesis of the antifungal antibiotic heat-stable antifungal factor (HSAF), a polycyclic tetramate macrolactam with a structure and mode of action distinct from the existing antifungal drugs. LeDSF3 was isolated from the culture broth of Lysobacter enzymogenes, and its chemical structure was established by NMR and MS. The purified compound induced green fluorescence in a reporter strain of Xanthomonas campestris, which contained a gfp gene under the control of a diffusible signaling factor (DSF)-inducible promoter. Exogenous addition of LeDSF3 in L. enzymogenes cultures significantly increased the HSAF yield, the transcription of HSAF biosynthetic genes, and the antifungal activity of the organism. The LeDSF3-regulated HSAF production is dependent on the two-component regulatory system RpfC/RpfG. Moreover, LeDSF3 upregulated the expression of the global regulator cAMP receptor-like protein (Clp). The disruption of clp led to no HSAF production. Together, the results show that LeDSF3 is a fatty acid-derived, diffusible signaling factor positively regulating HSAF biosynthesis and that the signaling is mediated by the RfpC/RpfG-Clp pathway. These findings may facilitate the antibiotic production through applied genetics and molecular biotechnology in Lysobacter, a group of ubiquitous yet underexplored microorganisms.


Phytopathology | 2014

Roles of a Solo LuxR in the Biological Control Agent Lysobacter enzymogenes Strain OH11

Guoliang Qian; Feifei Xu; Vittorio Venturi; Liangcheng Du; Fengquan Liu

Lysobacter enzymogenes is a ubiquitous plant-associated and environmentally friendly bacterium emerging as a novel biological control agent of plant disease. This bacterium produces diverse antifungal factors, such as lytic enzymes and a secondary metabolite (heat-stable antifungal factor [HSAF]) having antifungal activity with a novel structure and mode of action. The regulatory mechanisms for biosynthesis of antifungal factors is largely unknown in L. enzymogenes. The solo LuxR proteins have been shown to be widespread, playing important roles in plant-associated bacteria. Here, we cloned and studied a solo LuxR protein, LesR, from L. enzymogenes strain OH11. Overexpression but not deletion of lesR significantly impaired HSAF biosynthesis levels and antimicrobial activities but did not show visible effect on production of major lytic enzymes. Overexpression of lesR also led to remarkably accelerated cell aggregation and induced production of a melanin-like pigment in L. enzymogenes; these two phenotypes are mediated by the diffusible factor cell-to-cell signaling system of L. enzymogenes. The C-terminus helix-turn-helix domain was shown to be critical for several lesR-controlled functions. Overall, our study provides the first example of the roles and mechanisms of a solo LuxR protein in a plant-associated L. enzymogenes.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Biosynthetic Mechanism for Sunscreens of the Biocontrol Agent Lysobacter enzymogenes

Yan Wang; Guoliang Qian; Yaoyao Li; Yansheng Wang; Yulan Wang; Stephen Wright; Yue-zhong Li; Yuemao Shen; Fengquan Liu; Liangcheng Du

Lysobacter are ubiquitous environmental bacteria emerging as novel biocontrol agents and new sources of anti-infectives. So far, very little effort has been invested in the study of the biology of these Gram-negative gliding bacteria. Many Lysobacter species are characterized by their yellow-orange appearance. Using transposon mutagenesis, we identified a stand-alone polyketide synthase (PKS) gene cluster required for the pigment production in L. enzymogenes OH11. The yellow pigments were abolished in the “white” mutants generated by target-specific deletions of ketosynthase (KS), acyl carrier protein, or ketoreductase. Spectroscopic data suggested that the pigments belong to xanthomonadin-like aryl polyenes. Polyene-type polyketides are known to be biosynthesized by modular PKS (Type I), not by stand-alone PKS (Type II) which always contain the heterodimer KS-CLF (chain-length factor) as the key catalytic component. Remarkably, this aryl polyene PKS complex only contains the KS (ORF17), but not the CLF. Instead, a hypothetical protein (ORF16) is located immediately next to ORF17. ORF16–17 homologs are widespread in numerous uncharacterized microbial genomes, in which an ORF17 homolog is always accompanied by an ORF16 homolog. The deletion of ORF16 eliminated pigment production, and homology modeling suggested that ORF16 shares a structural similarity to the N-terminal half of CLF. A point-mutation of glutamine (Q166A) that is the conserved active site of known CLF abolished pigment production. The “white” mutants are significantly more sensitive to UV/visible light radiation or H2O2 treatment than the wild type. These results unveil the first example of Type II PKS-synthesized polyene pigments and show that the metabolites serve as Lysobacter “sunscreens” that are important for the survival of these ubiquitous environmental organisms.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2013

AsnB, regulated by diffusible signal factor and global regulator Clp, is involved in aspartate metabolism, resistance to oxidative stress and virulence in Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola

Guoliang Qian; Chunhui Liu; Guichun Wu; Fangqun Yin; Yancun Zhao; Yijing Zhou; Yanbing Zhang; Zhiwei Song; Jiaqin Fan; Baishi Hu; Fengquan Liu

Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzicola (Xoc) causes bacterial leaf streak in rice, which is a destructive disease worldwide. Xoc virulence factors are regulated by diffusible signal factor (DSF) and the global regulator Clp. In this study, we have demonstrated that asnB (XOC_3054), encoding an asparagine synthetase, is a novel virulence-related gene regulated by both DSF and Clp in Xoc. A sequence analysis revealed that AsnB is highly conserved in Xanthomonas. An asnB mutation in Xoc dramatically impaired pathogen virulence and growth rate in host rice, but did not affect the ability to trigger the hypersensitive response in nonhost (plant) tobacco. Compared with the wild-type strain, the asnB deletion mutant was unable to grow in basic MMX (-) medium (a minimal medium without ammonium sulphate as the nitrogen source) with or without 10 tested nitrogen sources, except asparagine. The disruption of asnB impaired pathogen resistance to oxidative stress and reduced the transcriptional expression of oxyR, katA and katG, which encode three important proteins responsible for hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) sensing and detoxification in Xanthomonas in the presence of H(2)O(2), and nine important known Xoc virulence-related genes in plant cell-mimicking medium. Furthermore, the asnB mutation did not affect extracellular protease activity, extracellular polysaccharide production, motility or chemotaxis. Taken together, our results demonstrate the role of asnB in Xanthomonas for the first time.

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Fengquan Liu

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Liangcheng Du

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Baishi Hu

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Gaoge Xu

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Guichun Wu

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Vittorio Venturi

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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Jiaqin Fan

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Sen Han

Nanjing Agricultural University

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Yuan Chen

Nanjing Agricultural University

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