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Featured researches published by Laura Fleites.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2014

“Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus” Prophage Late Genes May Limit Host Range and Culturability

Laura Fleites; Mukesh Jain; Shujian Zhang; Dean W. Gabriel

ABSTRACT “Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus” is an uncultured alphaproteobacterium that systemically colonizes its insect host both inter- and intracellularly and also causes a severe, crop-destroying disease of citrus called huanglongbing, or citrus “greening.” In planta, “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” is also systemic but phloem limited. “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” strain UF506 carries two predicted prophages, SC1 and SC2. Bacteriophage particles have been observed in experimentally “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus”-infected periwinkle but not in any other host. Comparative gene expression analysis of predicted SC1 late genes showed a much higher level of late gene expression, including holin transcripts (SC1_gp110), in “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus”-infected periwinkle relative to “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus”-infected citrus. To functionally characterize predicted holin and endolysin activity, SC1_gp110 and two predicted endolysins, one within SC1 (SC1_gp035) and another well outside the predicted prophage region (CLIBASIA_04790), were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. Both SC1 genes inhibited bacterial growth consistent with holin and endolysin function. The holin (SC1_gp110) promoter region was fused with a uidA reporter on pUFR071, a wide bacterial host range (repW) replicon, and used to transform Liberibacter crescens strain BT-1 by electroporation. BT-1 is the only liberibacter strain cultured to date and was used as a proxy for “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus.” pUFR071 was >95% stable without selection in BT-1 for over 20 generations. The reporter construct exhibited strong constitutive glucuronidase (GUS) activity in culture-grown BT-1 cells. However, GUS reporter activity in BT-1 was suppressed in a dose-dependent manner by crude aqueous extracts from psyllids. Taken together with plant expression data, these observations indicate that “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” prophage activation may limit “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” host range and culturability.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Three New Pierce's Disease Pathogenicity Effectors Identified Using Xylella fastidiosa Biocontrol Strain EB92-1.

Shujian Zhang; Pranjib K. Chakrabarty; Laura Fleites; Patricia A. Rayside; Donald L. Hopkins; Dean W. Gabriel

Xylella fastidiosa (X. fastidiosa) infects a wide range of plant hosts and causes economically serious diseases, including Pierces Disease (PD) of grapevines. X. fastidiosa biocontrol strain EB92-1 was isolated from elderberry and is infectious and persistent in grapevines but causes only very slight symptoms under ideal conditions. The draft genome of EB92-1 revealed that it appeared to be missing genes encoding 10 potential PD pathogenicity effectors found in Temecula1. Subsequent PCR and sequencing analyses confirmed that EB92-1 was missing the following predicted effectors found in Temecula1: two type II secreted enzymes, including a lipase (LipA; PD1703) and a serine protease (PD0956); two identical genes encoding proteins similar to Zonula occludens toxins (Zot; PD0915 and PD0928), and at least one relatively short, hemagglutinin-like protein (PD0986). Leaves of tobacco and citrus inoculated with cell-free, crude protein extracts of E. coli BL21(DE3) overexpressing PD1703 exhibited a hypersensitive response (HR) in less than 24 hours. When cloned into shuttle vector pBBR1MCS-5, PD1703 conferred strong secreted lipase activity to Xanthomonas citri, E. coli and X. fastidiosa EB92-1 in plate assays. EB92-1/PD1703 transformants also showed significantly increased disease symptoms on grapevines, characteristic of PD. Genes predicted to encode PD0928 (Zot) and a PD0986 (hemagglutinin) were also cloned into pBBR1MCS-5 and moved into EB92-1; both transformants also showed significantly increased symptoms on V. vinifera vines, characteristic of PD. Together, these results reveal that PD effectors include at least a lipase, two Zot-like toxins and a possibly redundant hemagglutinin, none of which are necessary for parasitic survival of X. fastidiosa populations in grapevines or elderberry.


mSphere | 2017

A Small Wolbachia Protein Directly Represses Phage Lytic Cycle Genes in “Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus” within Psyllids

Mukesh Jain; Laura Fleites; Dean W. Gabriel

Host acquisition of a new microbial species can readily perturb the dynamics of preexisting microbial associations. Molecular cross talk between microbial associates may be necessary for efficient resource allocation and enhanced survival. Classic examples involve quorum sensing (QS), which detects population densities and is both used and coopted to control expression of bacterial genes, including host adaptation factors. We report that a 56-amino-acid repressor protein made by the resident psyllid endosymbiont Wolbachia can enter cells of Liberibacter crescens, a cultured proxy for the uncultured psyllid endosymbiont “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” and repress “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” phage lytic cycle genes. Such repression in “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” may be critical to survival of both endosymbionts, since phage-mediated lysis would likely breach the immunogenic threshold of the psyllid, invoking a systemic and nonspecific innate immune reaction. ABSTRACT Huanglongbing (HLB) is a severe disease of citrus caused by an uncultured alphaproteobacterium “Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus” and transmitted by Asian citrus psyllids (Diaphorina citri). Two prophage genomes, SC1 and SC2, integrated in “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” strain UF506 were described previously, and very similar prophages are found resident in the majority of “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” strains described worldwide. The SC1 lytic cycle is marked by upregulation of prophage late genes, including a functional holin (SC1_gp110); these late genes are activated when “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” is in planta, but not when infecting the psyllid host. We previously reported that the holin promoter is strongly and constitutively active in Liberibacter crescens (a cultured proxy for uncultured “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus”) but is suppressed in a dose-dependent manner by crude aqueous extracts from D. citri applied exogenously. Here we report that the suppressor activity of the crude psyllid extract was heat labile and abolished by proteinase K treatment, indicating a proteinaceous repressor and of a size smaller than 30 kDa. The repressor was affinity captured from D. citri aqueous extracts using biotinylated holin promoter DNA immobilized on magnetic beads and subjected to liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Protein database interrogation was used to identify a small DNA-binding protein encoded by a gene carried by Wolbachia strain wDi, a resident endosymbiont of D. citri as the repressor. The in vitro-translated Wolbachia repressor protein was able to penetrate L. crescens cells, bind to “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” promoter DNA, and partially suppress holin promoter-driven β-glucuronidase (GUS) activity, indicating potential involvement of an additional interacting partner(s) or posttranslational modification(s) for complete suppression. Expression of the Wolbachia repressor protein appeared to be constitutive irrespective of “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” infection status of the insect host. IMPORTANCE Host acquisition of a new microbial species can readily perturb the dynamics of preexisting microbial associations. Molecular cross talk between microbial associates may be necessary for efficient resource allocation and enhanced survival. Classic examples involve quorum sensing (QS), which detects population densities and is both used and coopted to control expression of bacterial genes, including host adaptation factors. We report that a 56-amino-acid repressor protein made by the resident psyllid endosymbiont Wolbachia can enter cells of Liberibacter crescens, a cultured proxy for the uncultured psyllid endosymbiont “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” and repress “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” phage lytic cycle genes. Such repression in “Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus” may be critical to survival of both endosymbionts, since phage-mediated lysis would likely breach the immunogenic threshold of the psyllid, invoking a systemic and nonspecific innate immune reaction.


Microbiology | 2013

The RpfCG two-component system negatively regulates the colonization of sugar cane stalks by Xanthomonas albilineans

Philippe Rott; Laura Fleites; Imène Mensi; Sheppard L; Jean-Heinrich Daugrois; Dow Jm; Dean W. Gabriel

The genome of Xanthomonas albilineans, the causal agent of sugar cane leaf scald, carries a gene cluster encoding a predicted quorum sensing system that is highly related to the diffusible signalling factor (DSF) systems of the plant pathogens Xylella fastidiosa and Xanthomonas campestris. In these latter pathogens, a cluster of regulation of pathogenicity factors (rpf) genes encodes the DSF system and is involved in control of various cellular processes. Mutation of Xanthomonas albilineans rpfF, encoding a predicted DSF synthase, in Florida strain XaFL07-1 resulted in a small reduction of disease severity (DS). Single-knockout mutations of rpfC and rpfG (encoding a predicted DSF sensor and regulator, respectively) had no effect on DS or swimming motility of the pathogen. However, capacity of the pathogen to cause disease was slightly reduced and swimming motility was severely affected when rpfG and rpfC were both deleted. Similar results were obtained when the entire rpfGCF region was deleted. Surprisingly, when the pathogen was mutated in rpfG or rpfC (single or double mutations) it was able to colonize sugar cane spatially more efficiently than the wild-type. Mutation in rpfF alone did not affect the degree of spatial invasion. We conclude that the DSF signal contributes to symptom expression but not to invasion of sugar cane stalks by Xanthomonas albilineans strain XaFL07-1, which is mainly controlled by the RpfCG two-component system.


Phytopathology | 2009

An OmpA family outer membrane protein is required for both disease symptom development and sugarcane stalk colonization by Xanthomonas albilineans

Philippe Rott; Laura Fleites; Gary C. Marlow; Monique Royer; Dean W. Gabriel

Xanthomonas albilineans (Xa) is a systemic, xylem-invading pathogen that causes sugarcane leaf scald. Leaf symptoms vary from a single, white, narrow, Vol. 99, No. 6 (Supplement), 2009 S111 sharply defined stripe to complete wilting and necrosis of infected leaves, leading to plant death. Xa produces the toxin albicidin that blocks chloroplast differentiation, resulting in disease symptoms. Albicidin is the only previously known pathogenicity factor in Xa, yet albicidin-deficient mutant strains are still able to efficiently colonize sugarcane. We used Tn5 (transposome) mutagenesis in an attempt to identify additional Xa pathogenicity factors. Sugarcane cultivar CP80-1743, moderately susceptible to leaf scald, was inoculated by the decapitation method with 780 independently derived Tn5 insertions in Florida strain XaFL07-1. Leaf scald symptoms were recorded on emerging leaves one month after inoculation, and stalk colonization by the pathogen was determined two months after inoculation. In addition to the previously identified albicidin biosynthetic gene cluster mutations, four new Tn5 mutants were identified that produced no or very few leaf symptoms. These mutants produced albicidin in vitro but did not efficiently colonize sugarcane stalks. The transposon insertion site of all four mutants was found to be located in Orf XALc_0557 of the Xa genome. This gene is predicted to encode an OmpA family outer membrane protein, a previously unrecognized and apparently essential pathogenicity factor in Xa.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2013

Xanthomonas albilineans OmpA1 Appears to be Functionally Modular and Both the OMC and C-like Domains Are Necessary for Leaf Scald Disease of Sugarcane

Laura Fleites; Imène Mensi; Daniel Gargani; Shujian Zhang; Philippe Rott; Dean W. Gabriel

Several EZ-Tn5 insertions in gene locus XALc_0557 (OmpA1) of the sugarcane leaf scald pathogen Xanthomonas albilineans XaFL07-1 were previously found to strongly affect pathogenicity and endophytic stalk colonization. XALc_0557 has a predicted OmpA N-terminal outer membrane channel (OMC) domain and an OmpA C-like domain. Further analysis of mutant M468, with an EZ-Tn5 insertion in the upstream OMC domain coding region, revealed impaired epiphytic and endophytic leaf survival, impaired resistance to sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), structural defects in the outer membrane (OM), and hyperproduction of OM vesicles. Cloned full-length XALc_0557 complemented M468 for all phenotypes tested, including pathogenicity, resistance to SDS, and ability to survive both endophytically and epiphytically. Another construct, pCT47.3, which expressed only the C-like domain of XALc_0557, restored resistance to SDS in M468 but failed to complement any other mutant phenotype, indicating that the C-like domain functioned independently of the OMC domain to help maintain OM integrity. pCT47.3 also complemented pathogenicity, resistance to SDS, and stalk colonization in mutant M1152, which carries an EZ-Tn5 insert in the C-like coding region, indicating that both predicted domains are modular and necessary but neither is sufficient for X. albilineans pathogenicity, endophytic survival in, and epiphytic survival on sugarcane.


Phytopathology | 2010

Xanthomonas albilineans needs an OmpA family outer protein for disease symptom development and multiplication in the sugarcane stalk : [Abstracts]

Philippe Rott; Laura Fleites; Gary C. Marlow; Monique Royer; Dean W. Gabriel

Xanthomonas albilineans (Xa) is a systemic, xylem-invading pathogen that causes sugarcane leaf scald. Xa produces albicidin, a potent antibiotic and phytotoxin which blocks chloroplast differentiation, thus causing the foliar symptoms of the disease. Albicidin is the only known pathogenicity factor in Xa, yet albicidin deficient mutants are still able to colonize the sugarcane plant. In an attempt to identify other major pathogenicity factors, we screened 1,216 independent Tn5 insertions in Xa strain XaFL07-1 by single inoculation onto sugarcane cultivar CP80-1743. Mutants were screened for reduced pathogenicity (i.e., capacity to induce leaf symptoms and to multiply in the sugarcane stalk). Five independent Tn5 insertions were found in gene XALc_0557, which is predicted to encode an OmpA family outer membrane protein. Each of these insertions resulted in a mutant strain that elicited very slight to no symptoms and was not able to move as efficiently within the sugarcane stalk, both spatially and in intensity, as wild type XaFL07-1. Additional phenotypic studies showed that these mutants: 1) produced albicidin, 2) were less motile and 3) were slower growing than the wild type Xa in vitro. However, these OmpA mutants were able to multiply in sugarcane leaf tissue to levels similar to the wild-type strain XaFL07-1. Complementation analyses are currently underway. (Texte integral)


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2016

Surface polysaccharides and quorum sensing are involved in the attachment and survival of Xanthomonas albilineans on sugarcane leaves

Imène Mensi; Jean-Heinrich Daugrois; Isabelle Pieretti; Daniel Gargani; Laura Fleites; Julie Noëll; Francois Bonnot; Dean W. Gabriel; Philippe Rott

Xanthomonas albilineans, the causal agent of sugarcane leaf scald, is a bacterial plant pathogen that is mainly spread by infected cuttings and contaminated harvesting tools. However, some strains of this pathogen are known to be spread by aerial means and are able to colonize the phyllosphere of sugarcane before entering the host plant and causing disease. The objective of this study was to identify the molecular factors involved in the survival or growth of X. albilineans on sugarcane leaves. We developed a bioassay to test for the attachment of X. albilineans on sugarcane leaves using tissue-cultured plantlets grown in vitro. Six mutants of strain XaFL07-1 affected in surface polysaccharide production completely lost their capacity to survive on the sugarcane leaf surface. These mutants produced more biofilm in vitro and accumulated more cellular poly-β-hydroxybutyrate than the wild-type strain. A mutant affected in the production of small molecules (including potential biosurfactants) synthesized by non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) attached to the sugarcane leaves as well as the wild-type strain. Surprisingly, the attachment of bacteria on sugarcane leaves varied among mutants of the rpf gene cluster involved in bacterial quorum sensing. Therefore, quorum sensing may affect polysaccharide production, or both polysaccharides and quorum sensing may be involved in the survival or growth of X. albilineans on sugarcane leaves.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2011

'Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus' Carries an Excision Plasmid Prophage and a Chromosomally Integrated Prophage That Becomes Lytic in Plant Infections

Shujian Zhang; Zomary Flores-Cruz; Lijuan Zhou; Byung-Ho Kang; Laura Fleites; Mark Gooch; Nelson A. Wulff; Michael Davis; Yongping Duan; Dean W. Gabriel


Phytopathology | 2013

Heat Treatment Eliminates ‘Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus’ from Infected Citrus Trees Under Controlled Conditions

Michele T. Hoffman; Melissa Doud; Lisa Williams; Muqing Zhang; Fang Ding; Ed Stover; D. Hall; Shouan Zhang; Lisa Jones; Mark Gooch; Laura Fleites; Wayne Dixon; Dean W. Gabriel; Yongping Duan

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Dean W. Gabriel

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Philippe Rott

Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences

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Monique Royer

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Dean W. Gabriel

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Monique Royer

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Yongping Duan

Agricultural Research Service

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