Abstract

ABSTRACTThe bacterial plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae causes disease in a wide range of plants. The associated decrease in crop yields results in economic losses and threatens global food security. Competition exists between the plant immune system and the pathogen, the basic principles of which can be applied to animal infection pathways. P. syringae uses a type III secretion system (T3SS) to deliver virulence factors into the plant that promote survival of the bacterium. The P. syringae T3SS is a product of the hypersensitive response and pathogenicity (hrp) and hypersensitive response and conserved (hrc) gene cluster, which is strictly controlled by the codependent enhancer-binding proteins HrpR and HrpS. Through a combination of bacterial gene regulation and phenotypic studies, plant infection assays, and plant hormone quantifications, we now report that Chp8 (i) is embedded in the Hrp regulon and expressed in response to plant signals and HrpRS, (ii) is a functional diguanylate cyclase, (iii) decreases the expression of the major pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP) flagellin and increases extracellular polysaccharides (EPS), and (iv) impacts the salicylic acid/jasmonic acid hormonal immune response and disease progression. We propose that Chp8 expression dampens PAMP-triggered immunity during early plant infection.

Highlights

  • The bacterial plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae causes disease in a wide range of plants

  • Recent studies have identified that plants produce flavonoids upon infection with P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 and that this pathogen is susceptible to the plant flavonoid phloretin [14]

  • Plant-pathogen interactions are characterized by the sophisticated interplay between plant immunity elicited upon pathogen recognition, via pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP), and immune evasion by the pathogen [51,52,53]

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Summary

Introduction

The bacterial plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae causes disease in a wide range of plants. Diseases caused by plant pathogens represent a large agricultural burden They decrease crop yields, resulting in significant economic losses, and threaten global food security [2, 3]. Transcriptional control through HrpL and HrpRS is not limited to the hrp-hrc T3SS cluster but extends to other genes, including some which have unknown roles in P. syringae pathogenicity [10]. One of these genes is PSPTO_2907, otherwise known as chp (co-regulated with hrp 8) [10], whose role in pathogenicity we have investigated in this study

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