Prabhu B. Patil
Council of Scientific and Industrial Research
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Featured researches published by Prabhu B. Patil.
BMC Genomics | 2008
Daniel D. Sommer; Michael C. Schatz; Adam M. Phillippy; Pablo D. Rabinowicz; Seiji Tsuge; Ayako Furutani; Hirokazu Ochiai; Arthur L. Delcher; David R. Kelley; Ramana Madupu; Daniela Puiu; Diana Radune; Martin Shumway; Cole Trapnell; Gudlur Aparna; Gopaljee Jha; Alok K. Pandey; Prabhu B. Patil; Hiromichi Ishihara; Damien Meyer; Boris Szurek; Valérie Verdier; Ralf Koebnik; J. Maxwell Dow; Robert P. Ryan; Hisae Hirata; Shinji Tsuyumu; Sang Won Lee; Pamela C. Ronald; Ramesh V. Sonti
Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae causes bacterial blight of rice (Oryza sativa L.), a major disease that constrains production of this staple crop in many parts of the world. We report here on the complete genome sequence of strain PXO99A and its comparison to two previously sequenced strains, KACC10331 and MAFF311018, which are highly similar to one another. The PXO99A genome is a single circular chromosome of 5,240,075 bp, considerably longer than the genomes of the other strains (4,941,439 bp and 4,940,217 bp, respectively), and it contains 5083 protein-coding genes, including 87 not found in KACC10331 or MAFF311018. PXO99A contains a greater number of virulence-associated transcription activator-like effector genes and has at least ten major chromosomal rearrangements relative to KACC10331 and MAFF311018. PXO99A contains numerous copies of diverse insertion sequence elements, members of which are associated with 7 out of 10 of the major rearrangements. A rapidly-evolving CRISPR (clustered regularly interspersed short palindromic repeats) region contains evidence of dozens of phage infections unique to the PXO99A lineage. PXO99A also contains a unique, near-perfect tandem repeat of 212 kilobases close to the replication terminus. Our results provide striking evidence of genome plasticity and rapid evolution within Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae. The comparisons point to sources of genomic variation and candidates for strain-specific adaptations of this pathogen that help to explain the extraordinary diversity of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae genotypes and races that have been isolated from around the world.
PLOS Genetics | 2011
Steven A. Frese; Andrew K. Benson; Gerald W. Tannock; Diane M. Loach; Jaehyoung Kim; Min Zhang; Phaik Lyn Oh; Nicholas C. K. Heng; Prabhu B. Patil; Nathalie Juge; Donald A. MacKenzie; Bruce M. Pearson; Alla Lapidus; Eileen Dalin; Hope Tice; Eugene Goltsman; Miriam Land; Loren Hauser; Natalia Ivanova; Nikos C. Kyrpides; Jens Walter
Recent research has provided mechanistic insight into the important contributions of the gut microbiota to vertebrate biology, but questions remain about the evolutionary processes that have shaped this symbiosis. In the present study, we showed in experiments with gnotobiotic mice that the evolution of Lactobacillus reuteri with rodents resulted in the emergence of host specialization. To identify genomic events marking adaptations to the murine host, we compared the genome of the rodent isolate L. reuteri 100-23 with that of the human isolate L. reuteri F275, and we identified hundreds of genes that were specific to each strain. In order to differentiate true host-specific genome content from strain-level differences, comparative genome hybridizations were performed to query 57 L. reuteri strains originating from six different vertebrate hosts in combination with genome sequence comparisons of nine strains encompassing five phylogenetic lineages of the species. This approach revealed that rodent strains, although showing a high degree of genomic plasticity, possessed a specific genome inventory that was rare or absent in strains from other vertebrate hosts. The distinct genome content of L. reuteri lineages reflected the niche characteristics in the gastrointestinal tracts of their respective hosts, and inactivation of seven out of eight representative rodent-specific genes in L. reuteri 100-23 resulted in impaired ecological performance in the gut of mice. The comparative genomic analyses suggested fundamentally different trends of genome evolution in rodent and human L. reuteri populations, with the former possessing a large and adaptable pan-genome while the latter being subjected to a process of reductive evolution. In conclusion, this study provided experimental evidence and a molecular basis for the evolution of host specificity in a vertebrate gut symbiont, and it identified genomic events that have shaped this process.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2011
Adam J. Bogdanove; Ralf Koebnik; Hong Lu; Ayako Furutani; Samuel V. Angiuoli; Prabhu B. Patil; Marie-Anne Van Sluys; Robert P. Ryan; Damien Meyer; Sang-Wook Han; Gudlur Aparna; Misha Rajaram; Arthur L. Delcher; Adam M. Phillippy; Daniela Puiu; Michael C. Schatz; Martin Shumway; Daniel D. Sommer; Cole Trapnell; Faiza Benahmed; George Dimitrov; Ramana Madupu; Diana Radune; Steven A. Sullivan; Gopaljee Jha; Hiromichi Ishihara; Sang Won Lee; Alok K. Pandey; Vikas Sharma; Malinee Sriariyanun
Xanthomonas is a large genus of bacteria that collectively cause disease on more than 300 plant species. The broad host range of the genus contrasts with stringent host and tissue specificity for individual species and pathovars. Whole-genome sequences of Xanthomonas campestris pv. raphani strain 756C and X. oryzae pv. oryzicola strain BLS256, pathogens that infect the mesophyll tissue of the leading models for plant biology, Arabidopsis thaliana and rice, respectively, were determined and provided insight into the genetic determinants of host and tissue specificity. Comparisons were made with genomes of closely related strains that infect the vascular tissue of the same hosts and across a larger collection of complete Xanthomonas genomes. The results suggest a model in which complex sets of adaptations at the level of gene content account for host specificity and subtler adaptations at the level of amino acid or noncoding regulatory nucleotide sequence determine tissue specificity.
BMC Genomics | 2011
Neha Potnis; Ksenia V. Krasileva; Virginia Chow; Nalvo F. Almeida; Prabhu B. Patil; Robert P. Ryan; Molly Sharlach; Franklin Behlau; J Max Dow; M. T. Momol; Frank F. White; James F. Preston; Boris A. Vinatzer; Ralf Koebnik; João C. Setubal; David J. Norman; Brian J. Staskawicz; Jeffrey B. Jones
BackgroundBacterial spot of tomato and pepper is caused by four Xanthomonas species and is a major plant disease in warm humid climates. The four species are distinct from each other based on physiological and molecular characteristics. The genome sequence of strain 85-10, a member of one of the species, Xanthomonas euvesicatoria (Xcv) has been previously reported. To determine the relationship of the four species at the genome level and to investigate the molecular basis of their virulence and differing host ranges, draft genomic sequences of members of the other three species were determined and compared to strain 85-10.ResultsWe sequenced the genomes of X. vesicatoria (Xv) strain 1111 (ATCC 35937), X. perforans (Xp) strain 91-118 and X. gardneri (Xg) strain 101 (ATCC 19865). The genomes were compared with each other and with the previously sequenced Xcv strain 85-10. In addition, the molecular features were predicted that may be required for pathogenicity including the type III secretion apparatus, type III effectors, other secretion systems, quorum sensing systems, adhesins, extracellular polysaccharide, and lipopolysaccharide determinants. Several novel type III effectors from Xg strain 101 and Xv strain 1111 genomes were computationally identified and their translocation was validated using a reporter gene assay. A homolog to Ax21, the elicitor of XA21-mediated resistance in rice, and a functional Ax21 sulfation system were identified in Xcv. Genes encoding proteins with functions mediated by type II and type IV secretion systems have also been compared, including enzymes involved in cell wall deconstruction, as contributors to pathogenicity.ConclusionsComparative genomic analyses revealed considerable diversity among bacterial spot pathogens, providing new insights into differences and similarities that may explain the diverse nature of these strains. Genes specific to pepper pathogens, such as the O-antigen of the lipopolysaccharide cluster, and genes unique to individual strains, such as novel type III effectors and bacteriocin genes, have been identified providing new clues for our understanding of pathogen virulence, aggressiveness, and host preference. These analyses will aid in efforts towards breeding for broad and durable resistance in economically important tomato and pepper cultivars.
PLOS ONE | 2008
Hong Lu; Prabhu B. Patil; Marie-Anne Van Sluys; Frank F. White; Robert P. Ryan; J. Maxwell Dow; Pablo D. Rabinowicz; Jan E. Leach; Ramesh V. Sonti; Volker Brendel; Adam J. Bogdanove
Background Xanthomonas is a large genus of plant-associated and plant-pathogenic bacteria. Collectively, members cause diseases on over 392 plant species. Individually, they exhibit marked host- and tissue-specificity. The determinants of this specificity are unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings To assess potential contributions to host- and tissue-specificity, pathogenesis-associated gene clusters were compared across genomes of eight Xanthomonas strains representing vascular or non-vascular pathogens of rice, brassicas, pepper and tomato, and citrus. The gum cluster for extracellular polysaccharide is conserved except for gumN and sequences downstream. The xcs and xps clusters for type II secretion are conserved, except in the rice pathogens, in which xcs is missing. In the otherwise conserved hrp cluster, sequences flanking the core genes for type III secretion vary with respect to insertion sequence element and putative effector gene content. Variation at the rpf (regulation of pathogenicity factors) cluster is more pronounced, though genes with established functional relevance are conserved. A cluster for synthesis of lipopolysaccharide varies highly, suggesting multiple horizontal gene transfers and reassortments, but this variation does not correlate with host- or tissue-specificity. Phylogenetic trees based on amino acid alignments of gum, xps, xcs, hrp, and rpf cluster products generally reflect strain phylogeny. However, amino acid residues at four positions correlate with tissue specificity, revealing hpaA and xpsD as candidate determinants. Examination of genome sequences of xanthomonads Xylella fastidiosa and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia revealed that the hrp, gum, and xcs clusters are recent acquisitions in the Xanthomonas lineage. Conclusions/Significance Our results provide insight into the ancestral Xanthomonas genome and indicate that differentiation with respect to host- and tissue-specificity involved not major modifications or wholesale exchange of clusters, but subtle changes in a small number of genes or in non-coding sequences, and/or differences outside the clusters, potentially among regulatory targets or secretory substrates.
Science Advances | 2015
Rory Pruitt; Benjamin Schwessinger; Anna Joe; Nicholas Thomas; Furong Liu; Markus Albert; Michelle R. Robinson; Leanne Jade G. Chan; Dee Dee Luu; Huamin Chen; Ofir Bahar; Arsalan Daudi; David De Vleesschauwer; Daniel F. Caddell; Weiguo Zhang; Xiuxiang Zhao; Xiang Li; Joshua L. Heazlewood; Dipali Majumder; Mawsheng Chern; Hubert Kalbacher; Samriti Midha; Prabhu B. Patil; Ramesh V. Sonti; Christopher J. Petzold; Chang C. Liu; Jennifer S. Brodbelt; Georg Felix; Pamela C. Ronald
A sulfated peptide activates a rice immune receptor. Surveillance of the extracellular environment by immune receptors is of central importance to eukaryotic survival. The rice receptor kinase XA21, which confers robust resistance to most strains of the Gram-negative bacterium Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo), is representative of a large class of cell surface immune receptors in plants and animals. We report the identification of a previously undescribed Xoo protein, called RaxX, which is required for activation of XA21-mediated immunity. Xoo strains that lack RaxX, or carry mutations in the single RaxX tyrosine residue (Y41), are able to evade XA21-mediated immunity. Y41 of RaxX is sulfated by the prokaryotic tyrosine sulfotransferase RaxST. Sulfated, but not nonsulfated, RaxX triggers hallmarks of the plant immune response in an XA21-dependent manner. A sulfated, 21–amino acid synthetic RaxX peptide (RaxX21-sY) is sufficient for this activity. Xoo field isolates that overcome XA21-mediated immunity encode an alternate raxX allele, suggesting that coevolutionary interactions between host and pathogen contribute to RaxX diversification. RaxX is highly conserved in many plant pathogenic Xanthomonas species. The new insights gained from the discovery and characterization of the sulfated protein, RaxX, can be applied to the development of resistant crop varieties and therapeutic reagents that have the potential to block microbial infection of both plants and animals.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Pradip Kumar Singh; Chittpurna; Ashish; Vikas Sharma; Prabhu B. Patil; Suresh Korpole
Background Bacteriocins are antimicrobial peptides that are produced by bacteria as a defense mechanism in complex environments. Identification and characterization of novel bacteriocins in novel strains of bacteria is one of the important fields in bacteriology. Methodology/Findings The strain GI-9 was identified as Brevibacillus sp. by 16 S rRNA gene sequence analysis. The bacteriocin produced by strain GI-9, namely, laterosporulin was purified from supernatant of the culture grown under optimal conditions using hydrophobic interaction chromatography and reverse-phase HPLC. The bacteriocin was active against a wide range of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. MALDI-TOF experiments determined the precise molecular mass of the peptide to be of 5.6 kDa and N-terminal sequencing of the thermo-stable peptide revealed low similarity with existing antimicrobial peptides. The putative open reading frame (ORF) encoding laterosporulin and its surrounding genomic region was fished out from the draft genome sequence of GI-9. Sequence analysis of the putative bacteriocin gene did not show significant similarity to any reported bacteriocin producing genes in database. Conclusions We have identified a bacteriocin producing strain GI-9, belonging to the genus Brevibacillus sp. Biochemical and genomic characterization of laterosporulin suggests it as a novel bacteriocin with broad spectrum antibacterial activity.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2012
Vikas Sharma; Pradip Kumar Singh; Samriti Midha; Manish Ranjan; Suresh Korpole; Prabhu B. Patil
We report the 5.18-Mb genome sequence of Brevibacillus laterosporus strain GI-9, isolated from a subsurface soil sample during a screen for novel strains producing antimicrobial compounds. The draft genome of this strain will aid in biotechnological exploitation and comparative genomics of Brevibacillus laterosporus strains.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Mario L Arrieta-Ortiz; Luis M. Rodríguez-R; Álvaro Luis Pérez-Quintero; Lucie Poulin; Ana Díaz; Nathalia Arias Rojas; Cesar Trujillo; Mariana Restrepo Benavides; Rebecca Bart; Jens Boch; Tristan Boureau; Armelle Darrasse; Perrine David; Thomas Dugé de Bernonville; Paula Fontanilla; Lionel Gagnevin; Fabien Guérin; Marie-Agnès Jacques; Emmanuelle Lauber; Pierre Lefeuvre; Cesar Medina; Edgar M. Medina; Nathaly Montenegro; Alejandra Muñoz Bodnar; Laurent D. Noël; Juan F. Ortiz Quiñones; Daniela Osorio; Carolina Pardo; Prabhu B. Patil; Stéphane Poussier
Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. manihotis (Xam) is the causal agent of bacterial blight of cassava, which is among the main components of human diet in Africa and South America. Current information about the molecular pathogenicity factors involved in the infection process of this organism is limited. Previous studies in other bacteria in this genus suggest that advanced draft genome sequences are valuable resources for molecular studies on their interaction with plants and could provide valuable tools for diagnostics and detection. Here we have generated the first manually annotated high-quality draft genome sequence of Xam strain CIO151. Its genomic structure is similar to that of other xanthomonads, especially Xanthomonas euvesicatoria and Xanthomonas citri pv. citri species. Several putative pathogenicity factors were identified, including type III effectors, cell wall-degrading enzymes and clusters encoding protein secretion systems. Specific characteristics in this genome include changes in the xanthomonadin cluster that could explain the lack of typical yellow color in all strains of this pathovar and the presence of 50 regions in the genome with atypical nucleotide composition. The genome sequence was used to predict and evaluate 22 variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) loci that were subsequently demonstrated as polymorphic in representative Xam strains. Our results demonstrate that Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. manihotis strain CIO151 possesses ten clusters of pathogenicity factors conserved within the genus Xanthomonas. We report 126 genes that are potentially unique to Xam, as well as potential horizontal transfer events in the history of the genome. The relation of these regions with virulence and pathogenicity could explain several aspects of the biology of this pathogen, including its ability to colonize both vascular and non-vascular tissues of cassava plants. A set of 16 robust, polymorphic VNTR loci will be useful to develop a multi-locus VNTR analysis scheme for epidemiological surveillance of this disease.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2012
Samriti Midha; Manish Ranjan; Vikas Sharma; Annu Kumari; Pradip Kumar Singh; Suresh Korpole; Prabhu B. Patil
We report the 1.8-Mb genome sequence of Pediococcus pentosaceus strain IE-3, isolated from a dairy effluent sample. The whole-genome sequence of this strain will aid in comparative genomics of Pediococcus pentosaceus strains of diverse ecological origins and their biotechnological applications.