Abstract

The ubiquitous second messenger cyclic diguanylate (c-di-GMP) is involved in the regulation of different processes in bacteria. In phytopathogens, intracellular fluctuations in the concentration of this molecule contribute to the lifestyle switching from a motile and virulent stage to a sessile and biofilm-forming phase. Among the virulence mechanisms used by bacterial pathogens, different specific type secretion systems (TSSs) and the effector proteins that they translocate are included. Some of these TSS are conceived to suppress host immune responses during bacterial colonization. The modulation of the expression of secretion systems components and/or effector proteins can be influenced by c-di-GMP levels at transcriptional, translational, or post-translational levels and can take place directly by binding to specific or global regulators, or via transducer proteins. Different genera of plant-interacting bacteria have been analyzed to shed some light in the implications of c-di-GMP in the regulation of host plant colonization through protein secretion systems. Expression of (1) adhesins secreted by Type 1 secretion systems to bind the host plant in Pectobacterium (formerly Erwinia) and some beneficial Pseudomonas strains; (2) catalytic exoproteins delivered by Type 2 secretion systems to break plant cell wall in Dickeya; (3) effectors secreted by Type 3 secretion systems to suppress plant immunity in Xanthomonas; or (4) the activity of Type 6 secretion systems to export an ATPase in Pseudomonas, are finely tuned by c-di-GMP levels. In this minireview, we summarize the knowledge available about the implications of c-di-GMP in the regulation of protein secretion in different plant-interacting bacteria.Topic: Secretion systems and effector proteins of phytopathogenic and beneficial bacteria regulated by NSM.

Highlights

  • Bacteria have developed complex regulatory signaling circuits where small molecules serve as messengers that confer abilities to adapt to changing environments

  • Research on c-di-Guanosine monophosphate (GMP) signaling was initiated during the study of cellulose biosynthesis in Gluconacetobacter xylinus, which primed the investigation of its implication in the regulation of various cellular aspects in addition to exopolysaccharide synthesis, such as biofilm formation, bacterial motility, or protein secretion

  • The efforts of numerous researchers on these topics have led to the assumption that the role of this nucleotidic second messenger is critical for driving a bacterial lifestyle switching from motile to sessile in eukaryote-hosts interacting bacteria through the activation of different secretion systems

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Summary

Frontiers in Microbiology

Expression of (1) adhesins secreted by Type 1 secretion systems to bind the host plant in Pectobacterium (formerly Erwinia) and some beneficial Pseudomonas strains; (2) catalytic exoproteins delivered by Type 2 secretion systems to break plant cell wall in Dickeya; (3) effectors secreted by Type 3 secretion systems to suppress plant immunity in Xanthomonas; or (4) the activity of Type 6 secretion systems to export an ATPase in Pseudomonas, are finely tuned by c-di-GMP levels In this minireview, we summarize the knowledge available about the implications of c-di-GMP in the regulation of protein secretion in different plant-interacting bacteria.

INTRODUCTION
TYPE ONE SECRETION SYSTEM
DosD DgcA
Virulence Virulence Quorum sensing
EdcC and EdcE
Not defined DgcP
TYPE TWO SECRETION SYSTEM AND TYPE FOUR PILI
TYPE THREE SECRETION SYSTEM
TYPE FIVE SECRETION SYSTEM
TYPE SIX SECRETION SYSTEM
Findings
CONCLUDING REMARKS

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