Abstract

The Pectobacterium genus comprises pectolytic enterobacteria defined as the causal agents of soft rot, blackleg, and aerial stem rot diseases of potato and economically important crops. In this study, we undertook extensive genome-wide comparative analyses of twelve species that conform the Pectobacterium genus. Bioinformatics approaches outlined a low nucleotide identity of P. parmentieri and P. wasabiae with other species, while P. carotovorum subsp. odoriferum was shown to harbor numerous pseudogenes, which suggests low coding capacity and genomic degradation. The genome atlases allowed for distinguishing distinct DNA structures and highlighted suspicious high transcription zones. The analyses unveiled a noteworthy heterogeneity in the pathogenicity determinants. Specifically, phytotoxins, polysaccharides, iron uptake systems, and the type secretion systems III–V were observed in just some species. Likewise, a comparison of gene clusters encoding antimicrobial compounds put in evidence for high conservation of carotovoricin, whereas a few species possessed the phenazine, carbapenem, and carocins. Moreover, three clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats-Cas (CRISPR-Cas) systems: I-E, I-F, and III-A were identified. Surrounding some CRISPR-Cas regions, different toxin and antitoxin systems were found, which suggests bacterial suicide in the case of an immune system failure. Multiple whole-genome alignments shed light on to the presence of a novel cellobiose phosphotransferase system (PTS) exclusive to P. parmenteri, and an unreported T5SS conserved in almost all species. Several regions that were associated with virulence, microbe antagonism, and adaptive immune systems were predicted within genomic islands, which underscored the essential role that horizontal gene transfer has imparted in the dynamic evolution and speciation of Pectobacterium species. Overall, the results decipher the different strategies that each species has developed to infect their hosts, outcompete for food resources, and defend against bacteriophages. Our investigation provides novel genetic insights that will assist in understanding the pathogenic lifestyle of Pectobacterium, a genus that jeopardizes the agriculture sustainability of important crops worldwide.

Highlights

  • Members of Pectobacterium genus are defined as plant pathogenic enterobacteria that are responsible for the most devastating diseases, including common soft rot, blackleg, wilt, and aerial stem rot [1,2].Strains of this genus cause severe losses worldwide in field crops, diverse vegetables, fruits, and ornamental plants [3,4]

  • The general genomic features showed that P. c. subsp. odoriferum possessed the highest number of pseudogenes, indicating a coding ability degeneration, while P. parmentieri harbored the largest number of coding sequence regions (CDS)

  • Zones of high expression levels that seem to be controlled by the nucleosome were found in the genome atlases of P. c. subsp. carotovorum, P. aroidearum, and P. c. subsp. odoriferum, whereas P. atrosepticum appeared to encompass more unstable regions

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Members of Pectobacterium genus are defined as plant pathogenic enterobacteria that are responsible for the most devastating diseases, including common soft rot, blackleg, wilt, and aerial stem rot [1,2].Strains of this genus cause severe losses worldwide in field crops, diverse vegetables, fruits, and ornamental plants [3,4]. Pathogens 2019, 8, 247 bacteria due to its destructiveness impact that is exerted in agriculture fields as well as during storage and transportation [5], especially on potato, the third main staple food crop [6] and the major host of several Pectobacterium species [4,7]. Species of this genus have been isolated from infected tissues, soil, ground water, and can be associated with fruit flies, which aids in their rapid dissemination [8,9]. Pectobacterium harbored eight species: P. carotovorum subsp. atrosepticum, P. c. subsp. betavasculorum, P. c. subsp. carotovorum, P. c

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call