Abstract
Bacteria perceive light signals via photoreceptors and modulate many physiological and genetic processes. The impacts played by light, oxygen, or voltage (LOV) and blue light (BL) photosensory proteins on the virulence-related traits of plant bacterial pathogens are diverse and complex. In this study, we identified LOV protein (Pc-LOV1) from Pseudomonas cichorii JBC1 (PcJBC1) and characterized its function using LOV1-deficient mutant (JBC1Δlov1). In the dark state, the recombinant Pc-LOV1 protein showed an absorption band in UV-A region with a double peak at 340 nm and 365 nm, and within the blue-region, it exhibited a main absorption at 448 nm along with two shoulder peaks at 425 nm and 475 nm, which is a typical feature of oxidized flavin within LOV domain. The adduct-state lifetime (τrec) of Pc-LOV1 was 67.03 ± 4.34 min at 25 °C. BL negatively influenced the virulence of PcJBC1 and the virulence of JBC1Δlov1 increased irrespective of BL, indicating that Pc-LOV1 negatively regulates PcJBC1 virulence. Pc-LOV1 and BL positively regulated traits relevant to colonization on plant surface, such as adhesion to the plant tissue and biofilm formation. In contrast, swarming motility, exopolysaccharide production, and siderophore synthesis were negatively controlled. Gene expression supported the modulation of bacterial features by Pc-LOV1. Overall, our results suggest that the LOV photosensory system plays crucial roles in the adaptive responses and virulence of the bacterial pathogen PcJBC1. The roles of other photoreceptors, sensing of other wavelengths, and signal networking require further investigation.
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