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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2003, p . 3155-3166, Vol . 185,
No . 10
Characterization of the Xanthomonas axonopodis pv . glycines Hrp
Pathogenicity Island
Jung-Gun Kim,1 Byoung Keun Park,2 Chang-Hyuk
Yoo,1 Eunkyung Jeon,1 Jonghee Oh,1 and Ingyu
Hwang1*
School of Agricultural Biotechnology, Seoul National University, Suwon
441-744,1 Antibiotics Research Laboratory, Korea Research Institute
of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Daejon 305-600, Korea2
Received 17 October 2002/ Accepted 16 February 2003
We sequenced an approximately 29-kb region from Xanthomonas
axonopodis pv . glycines that contained the Hrp type III secretion
system, and we characterized the genes in this region by Tn3-gus
mutagenesis and gene expression analyses . From the region, hrp
(hypersensitive response and pathogenicity) and hrc (hrp and
conserved) genes, which encode type III secretion systems, and
hpa (hrp-associated) genes were identified . The characteristics
of the region, such as the presence of many virulence genes,
low G+C content, and bordering tRNA genes, satisfied the criteria for
a pathogenicity island (PAI) in a bacterium . The PAI was composed of
nine hrp, nine hrc, and eight hpa genes with seven
plant-inducible promoter boxes . The hrp and hrc mutants
failed to elicit hypersensitive responses in pepper plants but
induced hypersensitive responses in all tomato plants tested . The Hrp
PAI of X . axonopodis pv . glycines resembled the Hrp PAIs of
other Xanthomonas species, and the Hrp PAI core region was highly
conserved . However, in contrast to the PAI of Pseudomonas syringae,
the regions upstream and downstream from the Hrp PAI core region
showed variability in the xanthomonads . In addition, we demonstrate
that HpaG, which is located in the Hrp PAI region of X . axonopodis
pv . glycines, is a response elicitor . Purified HpaG elicited
hypersensitive responses at a concentration of 1.0 µM in pepper,
tobacco, and Arabidopsis thaliana ecotype Cvi-0 by acting as a
type III secreted effector protein . However, HpaG failed to elicit
hypersensitive responses in tomato, Chinese cabbage, and A .
thaliana ecotypes Col-0 and Ler . This is the first report to show
that the harpin-like effector protein of Xanthomonas species
exhibits elicitor activity .
Many gram-negative plant-pathogenic bacteria possess two sets of
genes that modulate their interactions with plants . The avirulence
gene determines host specificity based on gene-for-gene interactions,
and the hrp (hypersensitive reaction and pathogenicity) genes
are involved in pathogenicity and the induction of hypersensitive
responses (HRs) in nonhost plants (6) . The nine hrp
genes, which are highly conserved in plants and bacterial pathogens
of animals, are known as the hrc (hrp conserved) genes
(5) . The hpa (hrp-associated) genes
contribute to pathogenicity and to the induction of HR in nonhost
plants but are not essential for the pathogenic interactions of
bacteria with plants (19) . These genes are generally
clustered in a chromosomal region that spans 20 to 30 kb, and most of
the Hrp and Hrc proteins function as type III protein secretion
systems (16) .
Type III secretion systems mediate the translocation of effector
proteins across the bacterial membrane and into the host and are
often important for virulence and in the modulation of host defense
responses (16) . The hrp-hrc regions are now
designated pathogenicity islands (PAIs) in various plant-pathogenic
bacteria (2) . PAIs contain many virulence genes,
are present only in pathogenic bacteria, have different G+C contents
compared with the host bacterial DNA, are often flanked by direct
repeats, are bordered by tRNA genes and/or cryptic mobile genetic
elements, and are unstable (21) .
Compared to animal pathogens, relatively few effector proteins
have been reported in plant-pathogenic bacteria . The Hrp type III
secreted proteins include effectors that are essential for
pathogenicity, avirulence proteins, and nonspecific elicitors .
Included in this group are many avirulence proteins, including PopA,
PopB, and PopC of Ralstonia solanacearum (3,
20), HopPsyA of Pseudomonas syringae pv .
syringae (12), HrpZ from P . syringae pv .
syringae (22), HrpW, DspA, and HrpN of Erwinia amylovora
(17, 30, 46),
HrpNPnss of Pantoea stewartii subsp . stewartii
(1), HrpNEch of Erwinia chrysanthemi (4),
and HrpNEcc of Erwinia carotovora (32) .
The so-called harpin proteins HrpN and HrpW of E . amylovora
and HrpZ and HrpW of P . syringae pathovars are well-known HR
elicitors . In E . amylovora, HrpN is a major HR elicitor for
tobacco, and an hrpN mutant was nonpathogenic for pear plants
and did not elicit HR (46) . The HrpW of E . amylovora
has also been reported to be an HR elicitor for tobacco, but the
hrpW mutant retained the wild-type ability to elicit HR in
nonhosts and to cause disease in hosts (30) .
hrpZ and hrpW mutants of P . syringae pathovars were
only slightly reduced in HR elicitation activity in tobacco, whereas
HR activity was significantly reduced in an hrpZ hrpW double
mutant . However, the double mutant retained the ability to cause
disease symptoms on host plants (11) . Two
xanthomonad effector proteins, HrpB2 and HrpF, which are essential
for pathogenicity were identified in Xanthomonas campestris
pv . vesicatoria (38) . Furthermore, it has been reported that
XopA (Xanthomonas outer protein A) is important for growth in
planta and for full avirulence (33) . However, no
harpin-like proteins with elicitor activity have been reported in the
xanthomonads .
The hrp-hrc gene cluster is conserved in P . syringae
pathovars and has a tripartite mosaic structure that is composed of a
cluster of type III secretion genes, which are bounded by exchangeable
effector and conserved effector loci that contribute to parasitic
fitness and pathogenicity (2) . Since the Hrp PAIs of
P . syringae were isolated from different pathovars, it is
possible to compare their gene organization and function (2) .
However, among the xanthomonads, the Hrp PAI of X . campestris
pv . vesicatoria has mainly been characterized (6,
33) . To expand our knowledge regarding the Hrp
PAIs of xanthomonads, we studied genes that were involved in
pathogenicity and encoded effector proteins in X . axonopodis
pv . glycines, which is the causal agent of bacterial pustule on
soybean .
Previously, we isolated cosmid clones that complemented two hrp
mutants of X . axonopodis pv . glycines and demonstrated that
the Hrp PAI spanned approximately 25 kb of the bacterial genome (35) .
In the present study, we compared the Hrp PAI sequences of X .
axonopodis pv . glycines with those of other xanthomonads . We
discovered that, in contrast to the P . syringae Hrp PAI, the
concept of a tripartite mosaic architecture was not applicable to the
xanthomonad Hrp PAI . We also found that the HpaG protein, which is
encoded in the Hrp PAI region of X . axonopodis pv . glycines,
is an elicitor . This is the first report to show that the harpin-like
effector protein of Xanthomonas exhibits elicitor activity .
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and growth conditions. The
bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in Table
1 . All of the X . axonopodis pv . glycines strains used
in these experiments were derivatives of the parent strain 8ra .
P . syringae pv . syringae 61 and its hrcQA mutant
Pss61-2084 were obtained from Steven W . Hutcheson at the University
of Maryland . Escherichia coli cells were cultivated at 37°C
in Luria broth (LB; USB) or on LB agar plates . The X . axonopodis
pv . glycines strains were grown at 28°C in LB or on YDC (1%
yeast extract, 2% calcium carbonate, and 2% D-glucose)
agar plates . Antibiotics were used at the following concentrations:
ampicillin, 100 µg/ml; chloramphenicol, 15 µg/ml; kanamycin, 25
µg/ml; nalidixic acid, 25 µg/ml; and spectinomycin, 25 µg/ml for
E . coli; kanamycin, 50 µg/ml; spectinomycin, 50 µg/ml; and
rifampin, 50 µg/ml for X . axonopodis pv . glycines .
Tetracycline was used at 10 µg/ml for E . coli and at 2 µg/ml
for X . axonopodis pv . glycines .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains and plasmids
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DNA manipulations. Standard methods were used for DNA cloning,
restriction mapping, and gel electrophoresis (41) .
The vector DNA was treated with the appropriate restriction enzymes
as recommended, and DNA fragment extraction from gels was carried out
as described by the manufacturer (Qiagen) . DNA hybridizations were
performed with the Gene Images labeling and detection system,
according to the manufacturer's instructions (Amersham Biosciences) .
All other standard molecular biological methods were carried out
as described by Sambrook et al . (41) .
To complement hpaG mutant strain 70-1, pLGXhpaG carrying hrpG,
hrpX, and hpaG was constructed as follows . We amplified 0.75
kb of hpaG containing only the coding region and the putative
promoter region by PCR with primers HPAGH1 (5'-CCAAGCTTGAATACAGGTCTC-3')
and HPA1-2 (5'-CAACCTGCAGTTACTGCATCGA-3') . The amplified fragment
was blunt ended with the Klenow fragment (Takara) and then ligated
into the SmaI site of pBluescript II SK(+) . The DNA sequences
of the amplified fragments were confirmed by sequencing . The
fragment was then generated as a HindIII fragment and cloned
into the same site of pLGX3 carrying hrpG and hrpX .
For complementation analysis of other hrp, hrc, and hpa
mutants, seven recombinant plasmids were constructed, as listed in
Table 1: pGA161, pGA16037L, pGA166, pGA1604L,
pGA410, pGA411, and pGA406L .
Mating and mutagenesis. A genomic library of strain 8ra was
constructed previously in pLAFR3, and all pLAFR3 derivatives were
mobilized into X . axonopodis pv . glycines strains by
triparental mating, as described previously (26) .
The cosmid clone pGA16, which complemented the hrp mutations,
was mutagenized with the Tn3-gus transposon, as described by
Bonas et al . (7) . The insertion site and orientation of
Tn3-gus in each mutant were mapped by restriction
enzyme digestion analysis and by direct sequencing of the plasmid
with the primer Tn3gus (5'-CCGGTCATCTGAGACCATTAAAAGA-3'), which
allows sequencing out of the Tn3-gus transposon .
Marker exchange. Mutagenized plasmids that carried Tn3-gus
insertions were introduced individually into the parent strain 8ra by
conjugation . The hrp::Tn3-gus, hrc::Tn3-gus,
and hpa::Tn3-gus fusions were marker exchanged
into strain 8ra, as described previously (39) . All
marker exchanges were confirmed by Southern hybridization analysis .
Plant assays. Pathogenicity was determined by inoculating
cotyledons and leaves of the susceptible soybean cultivar 'Pella' as
described previously (26) . The growth patterns in
planta of X . axonopodis pv . glycines derivatives were
determined as described previously (26) . For the
HR test, plants of pepper (Capsicum annuum L . cv . Dabokkun or
Chokwang), tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill . cv . Seokwang
or Kwangsoo and six wild-type species that were obtained from the
Tomato Stock Center at the University of California at Davis),
tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv . Samsun NN and cv . Xanthi and
N . glutinosa), Chinese cabbage (Brassica campestris L . cv .
Karaksin-1), and Arabidopsis thaliana ecotypes Col-0, Cvi-0,
and Ler were inoculated with approximately 2
x 108 CFU/ml in a 0.85% NaCl
solution, and the plant responses were observed 12 to 24 h after
injection .
Construction of hrpG mutant strain 8raG. We generated
an hrpG mutant by insertion of an
cassette into the wild-type strain 8ra by marker exchange . The 1.4-kb
fragment of the hrpX gene was PCR amplified with X . oryzae
pv . oryzae genomic DNA as the template . Two PCR primers, hrpX1
(5'-GCAGCGATCTCTGCGTTGTC-3') and hrpX2 (5'-GAAGTGCTGGCGATAGCCCT-3'),
were used for the amplification . Twelve cosmid clones that carried
the hrpG and hrpX regulatory genes from X .
axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra were isolated from the genomic
library by colony hybridization with the 1.4-kb fragment of hrpX
from X . oryzae pv . oryzae as the probe . Among those, a 1.9-kb
BamHI fragment, which included the hrpG gene from pGB1,
was removed and subcloned into pLAFR3 E,
generating pGB106L . The
cassette (which specifies spectinomycin resistance) from pHP45
(36) was inserted into the unique EcoRI site within
the hrpG sequence in pGB106L to give pGB106 .
This plasmid was introduced into X . axonopodis pv . glycines
8ra to generate the hrpG::
mutant strain (8raG) by marker exchange mutagenesis . We then
introduced Tn3-gus fusions that had been constructed in
the hrcC, hrcJ, hrcU, hrcV, hrpD5, hrpE,
hrpF, hpaB, hpaC, hpaD, hapF,
hpaG, and hpaH genes into wild-type strain 8ra and the
hrpG mutant strain 8raG by marker exchange and measured the
ß-glucuronidase activities .
ß-Glucuronidase assays. The ß-glucuronidase enzyme assay was
performed as described previously, with some modifications (27).
X . axonopodis pv . glycines strains were grown in hrp
induction medium, XVM2 medium (50), for 24 h,
centrifuged, resuspended in GUS extraction buffer, and lysed by
sonication with a VCX-400 sonicator (Sonics & Materials Inc.) . The
extract was used in the ß-glucuronidase enzyme assay with
4-methylumbelliferyl glucuronide as the substrate . Fluorescence was
measured at 365-nm excitation and 460-nm emission in a TKO100
fluorometer (Hoefer Scientific Instruments) . One unit of
ß-glucuronidase was defined as 1 nmol of 4-methylumbelliferon
released per bacterium per minute .
Overexpression and purification of HpaG, Hpa1, XopA, and HrpN.
hpaG of X . axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra, hpa1 of X .
oryzae pv . oryzae PXO86, xopA of X . campestris pv .
vesicatoria 82-8, and hrpN of E . amylovora Ea321 were
PCR amplified and cloned into the NdeI and BamHI sites
of pT7-7 . The DNA sequences of the amplified fragments were
confirmed . E . coli BL21(DE3) strains harboring individual
cloned genes in pT7-7 were grown in LB, and each protein was
overexpressed following isopropylthiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)
induction . The cells were harvested by centrifugation and resuspended
in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), sonicated, and boiled for 15 min . After
centrifugation, the partially purified proteins were loaded onto the
anion-exchange column Mono Q (Amersham Biosciences), equilibrated
with 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), and eluted with a linear gradient of
NaCl with a fast protein liquid chromatography system (Amersham
Biosciences) . Each protein was further purified by gel filtration
with a Superdex 200 FPLC column (Amersham Biosciences) . Purified
protein concentrations were measured by the method of Bradford with
bovine serum albumin as the standard (8) .
Secretion analysis of HpaG. For the HpaG secretion assay,
X . axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra(pLGX3), hrcU mutant strain
1-44(pLGX3), hpaG mutant strain 70-1(pLGX3), and strain
70-1(pLGXhpaG) were grown in XVM2 broth medium with tetracycline for
24 h, subcultured in 500 ml of XVM2 broth medium containing
tetracycline and bovine serum albumin (50 µg/ml) for 24 h, and then
centrifuged twice . The cell pellet was washed twice in sterile
distilled water, resuspended in 5 ml of 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0)
buffer, and lysed by sonication . The culture supernatant was
precipitated with trichloroacetic acid at a final concentration of
10%, and the protein pellet was washed three times with 100% ethanol .
The protein pellet was resuspended in Laemmli buffer at a 1,000-fold
concentration . For immunoblot analysis, the cell lysates and the
supernatant proteins were separated by sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (15% acrylamide
gel) and transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane
(Amersham Biosciences) . The mouse polyclonal anti-HpaG antibody was
used as the primary antibody, and alkaline phosphatase-conjugated
rabbit anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (Pierce) was used as the secondary
antibody in the Western blots . Positive signals were detected with
One-Step nitroblue tetrazolium-5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate
solutions (Pierce) .
DNA sequencing and data analysis. The inserted DNA in pGA16
was digested with appropriate restriction enzymes and subcloned into
pBluescript II SK(+) prior to sequencing . Universal and reverse
primers were used for the primary reactions, and synthesized primers
were then used to sequence both strands completely . All of the DNA
sequencing reactions to identify Omegon-Km ( -kanamycin
resistance cassette) insertions were carried out with the primer HR-1
(5'-TGCTCAATCAATCACCGG-3') . The DNA sequence data were analyzed with
the BLAST program at the National Center for Biotechnology Institute
(18), MEGALIGN software (DNASTAR), and GENETYX-WIN
software (Software Development Inc.) . The tRNA gene was identified
with the tRNAscan-SE algorithm (31) .
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The complete DNA
sequence of the Hrp PAI of X . axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra was
deposited in the GenBank database under accession number
AF499777 .
Isolation of Hrp PAI of X . axonopodis pv . glycines. To
isolate the Hrp PAI of X . axonopodis pv . glycines, we mobilized
the strain 8ra genomic library into the nonpathogenic mutants
8-13 and 26-13 and isolated a cosmid clone (pGA16) that complemented
the mutant phenotype . Restriction enzyme digestion analysis showed
that pGA16 had an insert of approximately 27.8 kb . We also isolated
cosmid clones pGA4 and pGA33, which overlapped the sequences at the
ends of pGA16 . Southern hybridization analysis confirmed that the
inserted fragments were colinear with the X . axonopodis pv .
glycines 8ra genome (data not shown) . Restriction enzyme and Southern
hybridization analyses showed that pGA16 and pGA4 overlapped in the
11.8-kb region between hpaP and hpaF and that pGA16 and
pGA33 overlapped in the 5.8-kb region between hrcC and hpaH
(Fig . 1) . The complete DNA sequence of the 27.8-kb
insert in pGA16 contained 26 putative open reading frames (ORFs) and
part of hpaF (Fig . 1) . The region had an overall G+C
content of 62%, which is lower than the average G+C content of 65%
for xanthomonads (13) .
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FIG . 1 . Genetic organization and restriction map of the Hrp PAI of X .
axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra, which was cloned in pGA16, pGA4, and
pGA33 . Open arrows indicate the positions and orientations of the hrp,
hrc, and hpa genes . Black rectangles above open arrows
indicate the PIP boxes . Vertical bars in the pGA16 map indicate the
positions and orientations of the Tn3-gus insertions, and the
major phenotypes of the mutants are represented below the restriction
map . B, BamHI; E, EcoRI; H, HindIII; X, XbaI .
Enzyme sites from the vector are shown in parentheses.
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The complete DNA sequence of the Hrp PAI region revealed nine hrp
genes, nine hrc genes, eight hpa genes, and one tRNA gene .
In addition, the sequence contained one ORF that had no apparent
role in the bacterium-plant interaction . All of the predicted
Hrp, Hrc, and Hpa proteins of X . axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra
are compared with related proteins in Table 2 . In total, there
were seven predicted plant-inducible promoter (PIP) boxes (6)
in the Hrp PAI region: Four genes (hpaG, hrpB1, hrcU,
and hrcQ) had perfect PIP boxes (TTCGC-N15-TTCGC),
while the hpaH, hrpF, and hpaF genes had
imperfect PIP boxes (hpaH, TTCGC-N15-TTCGT; hrpF,
TTCGC-N8-TTCGT; hpaF, TTCGC-N16-TTCGC) in their
putative promoter regions (Fig . 1) .
| TABLE 2 . Comparison of Hrp, Hrc, and Hpa proteins of X . axonopodis
pv . glycines 8ra with related proteins
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Core region of xanthomonad Hrp PAI is highly conserved but flanking
regions are variable. The Hrp PAI core region encoded mainly genes that
were necessary for type III secretion systems, and the cluster was
delimited by hrcC and hpaB in X . axonopodis pv .
glycines (Fig . 1) . The 20 genes, from hrcC
to hpaB, of the core region were present in all five
Xanthomonas species tested (Fig . 2) and highly conserved
among xanthomonads, with more than 80% identity at the amino
acid level except for HpaA, for which there was relatively low
identity among the different species (Table 2) .
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FIG . 2 . Comparisons of Hrp PAIs of five Xanthomonas species . The
Hrp PAI core regions and variable flanking regions of X . axonopodis
pv . glycines, X . axonopodis pv . citri, X . campestris pv .
campestris, X . campestris pv . vesicatoria, and X . oryzae
pv . oryzae are represented . The positions and orientations of the hrp,
hrc, and hpa genes are shown by open and color-filled
arrows . Each gene is named above or below the arrows . The colors
represent homologues of the encoded proteins . The organization and size
of the genes are depicted based on nucleotide sequence data from the
GenBank database . The following sequences were used: X . axonopodis
pv . citri genes (GenBank accession no.
AE008923); X . campestris pv . campestris genes (AE008922);
ORF1 to HrpB1 of X . campestris pv . vesicatoria (U33548);
HrcQ to HpaG of X . campestris pv . vesicatoria (AF056246);
Hpa2 to HrpB1 of X . oryzae pv . oryzae (AF026197);
HrcU to HpaB of X . oryzae pv . oryzae (AB045311);
and HrpF to HpaF of X . oryzae pv . oryzae (AB045312).
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The HrpB7, HpaA, HrpD6, HrpE, and HpaB proteins were found only in
xanthomonads and not in the closely related Hrp PAI of Ralstonia
solanacearum (Table 2) (13,
14, 24, 40) . Homologs
of X . axonopodis pv . glycines hpaH and hpaG were
present upstream from the Hrp PAI core region in all five
Xanthomonas species (Fig . 2) . However, there
were no mobile elements in this region in X . axonopodis pv .
glycines and pv . citri or in Xanthomonas campestris pv .
campestris (Fig . 2) . Homologs of the hrpF and hpaF
genes of X . axonopodis pv . glycines were identified downstream
from the Hrp PAI core region and were highly conserved in
Xanthomonas species . However, the hpaF homolog was not
present in X . campestris pv . campestris . Instead, the hrpW
homolog from P . syringae pathovars and Erwinia amylovora
was present in this region . In two X . axonopodis pathovars and
X . campestris pv . vesicatoria, the tRNAArg gene was
located downstream of the Hrp PAI core region . In contrast, tRNAArg
was absent from the Hrp PAI regions of X . campestris pv .
campestris and Xanthomonas oryzae pv . oryzae (Fig.
2) .
Phenotypes of hrp, hrc, and hpa mutants.
The pGA16 plasmid was mutagenized with Tn3-gus to investigate
the functions of the proteins that are encoded by genes in the
Hrp PAI of X . axonopodis pv . glycines . Restriction enzyme analysis
and direct sequencing of the mutagenized plasmids mapped a total
of 15 insertions in the Hrp PAI region (Fig . 1) . Each
marker-exchanged mutant was assayed for pathogenicity and the ability
to induce HR in pepper plants . All of the mutant strains were
complemented in pathogenicity and the ability to induce HR with the
appropriate clone . pGA161 complemented the hpaH and hpaC
mutants; pGA16037L complemented the hrcC mutant; pGA166
complemented the hrcJ mutant; pGA1604L complemented the
hrcU and hrcV mutants; pGA410 complemented the hrpD5,
hrpE, hpaB, and hpaD mutants; pGA411 complemented
the hrpF mutant; and pGA406L complemented the hpaF mutant
(data not shown) .
The hrp and hrc genes tested were essential for full
pathogenicity and for the induction of HR (Fig . 3A and
B) . The hpa mutants, which included hpaG, hpaC,
and hpaF mutants, had significantly reduced virulence but
induced HR in pepper plants (Fig . 3A and B) . By
contrast, the hpaH mutant showed significantly reduced
virulence and did not induce HR in pepper plants (Fig . 3A and B) .
The wild-type strain 8ra and its hrp, hrc, and hpa
mutants did not induce HR in tobacco plants (Fig . 3B) .
To enhance the credibility of the HR bioassays, cells of P .
syringae pv . syringae 61 and its hrcQA mutant
Pss61-2084 were infiltrated into four different nonhost plants . The
wild-type strain 61 induced HR in all four nonhost plants, and its
hrcQA mutant did not, as expected (Fig .
3B) . In order to correlate pathogenicity with bacterial growth in
planta, we inoculated approximately 5 x
105 CFU of the wild-type strain 8ra, the nonpathogenic mutant
strain 8-13, and the hpaF mutant strain 2-47 into Pella cotyledons .
The hrpF mutant strain 8-13 increased about 10-fold in number
during the first day of infection and then remained constant
for 7 days, whereas strain 8ra increased 1,000-fold (Fig . 4) .
The hpaF mutant strain 2-47 increased in planta by about 100-fold
during the first 7 days, but the cells grew more slowly and to
a lower density than wild-type strain 8ra (Fig . 4) .
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FIG . 3 . (A) Effects of mutations in hrc, hrp, and hpa
genes of X . axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra on pathogenicity . a,
water control; b, 8ra; c, hrcC mutant 3-33; d, hpaG mutant
70-1; e, hpaH mutant 9-21; f, hpaF mutant 2-47 . The
soybean leaves and cotyledons were photographed 12 days and 8 days after
inoculation, respectively . The soybean leaves that were inoculated with
strain 8ra had typical symptoms, i.e., pustule formation surrounded by a
chlorotic halo (b) . No symptoms developed following infection with
either strain 3-33 (c) . The hpaG, hpaH, and hpaF
mutant strains produced a few pustules underneath the leaves, and the
symptoms developed slowly (d, e, and f) . In the cotyledon assays, yellow
chlorotic areas developed on the wounded detached cotyledons that were
inoculated with strain 8ra (b) . However, no yellow chlorotic patches
were observed in infections with strains 3-33 (c) . The cotyledons that
were inoculated with the hpaG, hpaH, and hpaF
strains (d, e, and f) had small yellowish regions, but symptoms
developed very slowly compared to infections involving the wild-type
strain . (B) Responses of nonhost pepper, tomato, tobacco, and Chinese
cabbage plants to infection with hrp, hrc, and hpa
mutants of X . axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra . Responses of pepper (Capsicum
annuum L . cv . Chokwang) (a), tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum
Mill . cv . Seokwang) (b), tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv . Samsun
NN) (c), and Chinese cabbage (Brassica campestris L . cv .
Karaksin-1) (d) . Sites: 1, water; 2, 8ra; 3, hrpG mutant 8raG; 4,
hpaH mutant 9-21; 5, hpaG mutant 70-1; 6, hpaC
mutant 1-46; 7, hrcC mutant 3-33; 8, hrcU mutant 1-44; 9,
hrpF mutant 1-34; 10, hpaF mutant 2-47; 11, Pss61; 12,
hrcQA mutant Pss61-2084) . The pepper, tomato, and Chinese
cabbage leaves were photographed 24 h after injection.
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FIG . 4 . Growth patterns of X . axonopodis pv . glycines parent
strain 8ra, hrpF mutant 8-13, and hpaF mutant 2-47 in
soybean (cv . Pella) cotyledons . Bacterial numbers were determined daily
after inoculation . The data are shown as the average values for five
samples, and the vertical bars indicate the error ranges.
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Since all of the hrp mutants induced HR in the two cultivars
of Lycopersicon esculentum Mill . cv . Seokwang and cv . Kwangsoo
(Fig . 3B), we used other Lycopersicon species to
determine whether various tomato species responded differently to
X . axonopodis pv . glycines . All of the nonpathogenic mutants were
tested for HR by injection into wild-type tomato plants, such as
L . chmielewskii, L . hirsutum, L . panviflorum, L .
pennelli, L . peravianum, and L . pinpinellifolium .
All of the mutants induced HR in all of the wild-type tomato plants
tested . When Chinese cabbage was used as the nonhost plant, the
wild-type strain 8ra and all hpa mutant strains except the
hpaC mutant strain 1-46 induced HR, and all hrp and hrc
mutants failed to induce HR (Fig . 3B) . The hpaC
mutant strain 1-46 exhibited no detectable HR after 24 h (Fig.
3B) . This indicates that hpaC has an important role
in incompatible interactions between X . axonopodis pv . glycines
and Chinese cabbage .
Expression of hrp, hrc, and hpa genes.
To determine whether the hrp, hrc, and hpa genes of X .
axonopodis pv . glycines were regulated by HrpG and HrpX, as
previously observed in X . campestris pv . vesicatoria and X .
oryzae pv . oryzae, we measured the expression levels of the
hrp, hrc, and hpa genes in both the wild-type
strain 8ra and the hrpG mutant strain 8raG . All of the genes
except hpaH were expressed at high levels in the wild-type
background when the cells were grown in hrp induction medium,
whereas the expression levels were very low in the 8raG derivatives
(Fig . 5) . The expression of all of the 8raG
derivatives was complemented by pLGX3 carrying X . axonopodis
pv . glycines hrpG and hrpX (Fig . 5) . The hpaF
gene was the most strongly expressed gene, while hpaH expression
was very low under the conditions used in our experiments . Taken
together, our results indicate that all of the hrp, hrc, and
hpa genes of X . axonopodis pv . glycines are regulated by
HrpG and HrpX .
|
FIG . 5 . Expression levels of hrp, hrc, and hpa
genes in X . axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra, 8raG, 8ra(pLGX3), and
8raG(pLGX3) after growth in XVM2 . ß-Glucuronidase activities were
measured as described in Materials and Methods and are averages of three
experiments . One unit of ß-glucuronidase was defined as 1 nmol of
4-methylumbelliferon released per bacterium per minute.
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HpaG is an Hrp type III-secreted elicitor. Since HpaG has the
features of harpins, which are found in P . syringae pathovars,
Erwinia species, and Ralstonia solanacearum, we
investigated whether HpaG had HR elicitor activity in various nonhost
plants . The wild-type strain 8ra elicited HRs in pepper (Capsicum
annuum L . cv . Chokwang), tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum
Mill . cv . Kwangsoo), Chinese cabbage, and A . thaliana ecotype
Cvi-0 . Interestingly, purified HpaG (1 µM) elicited HRs in pepper and
A . thaliana ecotype Cvi-0, whereas it failed to elicit HRs in
tomato, Chinese cabbage, and A . thaliana ecotype Col-0 and Ler
(data not shown) . In tobacco plants, HpaG elicited HRs, but the
wild-type strain 8ra did not (Fig . 6) . To compare
the elicitor activities of HpaG with those of other xanthomonad HpaG
homologs and a harpin protein, we purified Hpa1 of X . oryzae
pv . oryzae, XopA of X . campestris pv . vesicatoria, and HrpN of
Erwinia amylovora and injected them separately into tobacco
leaves . HRs were observed clearly at 1 µM and partial HRs were
observed at 0.5 µM HpaG and HrpN (Fig . 6A) . However,
XopA did not exhibit any elicitor activities, and Hpa1 showed
clear HR at concentrations above 5 µM (Fig . 6A) .
|
FIG . 6 . Comparison of HpaG activity with other known harpin HrpN and
harpin-like XopA and Hpa1 (A) . Effect of HpaG on the ability to induce
HR in tobacco leaves . Sites: 1, 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0); 2, 8ra(pLAFR3)
(2 x 108 CFU/ml); 3,
8ra(pLGX3) (2 x 108
CFU/ml); 4, hrcU mutant 1-44(pLGX3) (2
x 108 CFU/ml); 5, HpaG (1
µM) in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0); 6, hpaG mutant 70-1(pLGX3) (2
x 108 CFU/ml); 7,
70-1(pLGXhpaG) (2 x 108
CFU/ml) (B) . The tobacco leaves were photographed 24 h after injection.
|
|
Western blot analysis was performed to examine HpaG secretion via Hrp
type III secretion systems . HpaG was detected in the cell lysates and
culture supernatants of strain 8ra harboring pLGX3 (Fig.
7) . Although HpaG was not detected in the cell lysates
and culture supernatants of the hpaG mutant strain 70-1(pLGX3),
it was detected in both the cell lysates and culture supernatants
of strain 70-1(pLGXhpaG) . HpaG was not detected in the culture
supernatant of hrcU mutant strain 1-44 carrying pLGX3, whereas
it was detected in cell lysates of this strain (Fig . 7) .
Therefore, we conclude that HpaG is an Hrp type III-secreted effector
protein .
|
FIG . 7 . Secretion analysis of HpaG . All strains used in this analysis
harbored additional copies of the hrpG and hrpX gene in
pLAFR3 . The approximate sizes of the proteins are shown at the right .
Lanes: 1, total cell protein of 8ra(pLGX3); 2, total cell protein of
hrcU mutant 1-44(pLGX3); 3, total cell protein of hpaG mutant
70-1(pLGX3); 4, total cell protein of 70-1(pLGXhpaG); 5, supernatant
protein of 8ra(pLGX3); 6, supernatant protein of 1-44(pLGX3); 7,
supernatant protein of 70-1(pLGX3); 8, supernatant protein of
70-1(pLGXhpaG).
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|
In comparison with other HpaG homologs, HpaG showed high-level
homology with Hpa1 of X . axonopodis pv . citri (93.2% identity)
and Hpa1 of X . oryzae pv . oryzae (66.2% identity) . XopA (50.4%
identity) of X . campestris pv . vesicatoria and Hpa1 (31.4% identity)
of X . campestris pv . campestris lacked 16 and 9 amino acid
residues, respectively, in the internal region of HpaG (Fig.
8) . HpaG (21% glycine), Hpa1 (22% glycine) of X .
axonopodis pv . citri, and Hpa1 (26% glycine) of X . oryzae
pv . oryzae had relatively high ratios of glycine residues, whereas
XopA (8% glycine) and Hpa1 (13% glycine) of X . campestris pv .
campestris had lower ratios (Fig . 8) .
|
FIG . 8 . Alignment of HpaG of X . axonopodis pv . glycines with Hpa1
of X . axonopodis pv . citri, Hpa1 of X . oryzae pv . oryzae,
XopA of X . campestris pv . vesicatoria, and Hpa1 of X .
campestris pv . campestris . The alignment was produced with the
Clustal X program . Asterisks (*), colons (:), and periods (.) indicate
identical amino acid residues, conserved residues, and similar residues,
respectively.
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Wild-type strain of X . axonopodis pv . glycines requires
additional copies of hrpG and hrpX to induce HR in tobacco plants.
Among the various nonhost plants, wild-type strain 8ra was able to
induce HRs in pepper, tomato, Chinese cabbage, and A . thaliana
ecotype Cvi-0 . However, wild-type strain 8ra did not induce HR in
tobacco plants (Fig . 3B and 6) . In order to
identify the factor from X . oryzae pv . oryzae that elicited HR
in tobacco plants, we introduced a cosmid library of X . oryzae
pv . oryzae KXO85 into X . axonopodis pv . glycines 8ra . Among
the transconjugants that harbored genomic clones, we isolated a
cosmid clone, pCH85, that conferred on strain 8ra the ability to
induce HRs in tobacco plants . We subcloned the 8.5-kb EcoRI
fragment from pCH85 into pLAFR3 and sequenced the fragment .
Interestingly, we found that this DNA fragment contained the
hrpG and hrpX genes of X . oryzae pv . oryzae . This finding led
us to introduce pLGX3 into the wild-type strain 8ra . The resulting
strain, 8ra(pLGX3), induced HRs in tobacco plants (Fig . 6) .
The expression levels of hrp, hrc, and hpa genes were
increased 8- to 35-fold in the presence of the additional copies of
the hrpG and hrpX genes (Fig . 5) . The
expression levels of all of the 8raG derivatives carrying pLGX3 were
lower than those of 8ra derivatives carrying the same plasmid but
higher than those of 8ra derivatives (Fig . 5) . This
indicates that the wild-type strain of X . axonopodis pv .
glycines 8ra requires additional copies of the hrpG and
hrpX genes on a multicopy plasmid to induce HRs in tobacco
plants . To determine whether HpaG had a major role in inducing HR in
tobacco plants, strain 70-1(pLGX3) was injected into tobacco leaves .
Strain 70-1(pLGX3) induced no HR, strain 1-44(pLGX3) failed to induce
HR, and strain 70-1(pLGXhpaG) showed clear HR in tobacco plants (Fig.
6) .
In this study, we isolated the Hrp PAI of X . axonopodis pv .
glycines and compared it with the PAIs of four related Xanthomonas
species . The characteristics of the region, such as the presence
of many virulence genes, the low G+C content, and bordering
tRNA genes, satisfied the criteria for a PAI of a bacterium (21) .
The Hrp PAI core region was composed of 20 genes, from hrcC to
hpaB, and encoded a type III secretion system that was highly
conserved (>90% similarity) among xanthomonads . Some of the proteins
encoded by the Hrp PAI core region have been characterized previously
in X . campestris pv . vesicatoria (10,
24, 33, 38,
48) . A model has been proposed for X . campestris
pv . vesicatoria Hrp proteins in type III secretion systems;
however, the exact functions of most of these proteins remain to be
determined (38) . Five transcriptional units have been
reported in the Hrp PAI core region of X . campestris pv .
vesicatoria, and genes within these units are regulated by HrpG and
HrpX (47, 50) . Our findings are
similar, in that the genes of the Hrp PAI core region of X .
axonopodis pv . glycines are regulated by HrpG and HrpX .
The phenotypes of the hrc, hrp, and hpa mutants of X .
axonopodis pv . glycines were similar to those of their respective
X . campestris pv . vesicatoria mutants . However, there were
some discrepancies in earlier comparisons of X . axonopodis pv .
glycines and X . campestris pv . vesicatoria . First, Oh and
colleagues reported that a mutation in hrcU did not abolish
the ability to induce HR in pepper plants (34) .
However, we found that a hrcU mutation did abolish the ability
to induce HR in pepper plants . We believe that the phenotype of our
hrcU mutant (strain 1-44) is consistent with that of X .
campestris pv . vesicatoria . Second, all of the hrp and
hrc mutants of X . axonopodis pv . glycines retained the
ability to induce HRs in tomato plants . This suggests that the
bacterium uses hrp-independent systems or elicitors to induce
HRs in tomato plants . Since it was conceivable that toxic substances
produced by X . axonopodis pv . glycines are responsible for inducing
HR in tomato leaves, we infiltrated culture supernatants into
tomato and tobacco leaves . We found no HR in either tomato or tobacco
leaves (J.-G . Kim and I . Hwang, unpublished data) . Therefore, it is
very unlikely that toxic substances produced by X . axonopodis
pv . glycines induced HR in tomato leaves .
Mutations in the hpaB and hpaD genes of X . axonopodis
pv . glycines reduced bacterial pathogenicity, although an ORF1 mutant
retained full pathogenicity . Therefore, this region may not
contribute qualitatively to pathogenicity, and may contain some
redundancies . The corresponding regions in other Xanthomonas
species are poorly characterized compared to the Hrp PAI core region
genes . The exact contributions to parasitic fitness of hpaD
and ORF1 of X . axonopodis pv . glycines and of the E3
gene of X . campestris pv . vesicatoria are unclear .
HpaF is one of the bacterial leucine-rich repeat (LRR) proteins,
and homologs are present in the Hrp PAI region of other Xanthomonas
species with the exception of X . campestris pv . campestris (Fig .
2) . Although the LRR motif is of considerable biological
interest, the mechanism underlying LRR activity is unknown (28,
29) . The LRR proteins appear to have essential
roles in the pathogenicity of animal-pathogenic bacteria . The outer
membrane protein YopM of Yersinia pestis, which consists of 13
tandem LRR repeats, is an effector protein that is secreted by the
type III secretion pathway and plays an important role in the initial
stages of infection (37) . The InlB surface protein
of Listeria monocytogenes carries eight tandem LRR repeats
that are sufficient for entry into mammalian cells (9) .
Ours is the first report that a mutation in the hpaF gene of a
plant-pathogenic bacterium affects pathogenicity and symptom
development .
PopC of R . solanacearum and HpaG of X . campestris pv .
vesicatoria, which have similar LRR domains, have undetermined roles,
since knockout mutations in these genes had no effect on either
pathogenicity or HR induction (20,
33) . Southern analysis showed that other bacterial strains (Ralstonia
solanacearum, Agrobacterium tumefaciens, Pseudomonas
syringae pathovars, Pseudomonas fluorescens, Bacillus
subtilis, and E . coli) did not hybridize with the hpaF-containing
probe, whereas Erwinia amylovora Ea321 showed two weak signals
(data not shown) . This indicates that HpaF belongs to the bacterial
LRR-type protein group and is unique to xanthomonads . Based on
the structures and possible functions of known LRR proteins (29),
the LRR motif of HpaF may be involved in the binding of a specific
ligand of the host cell cytoplasm during disease development . Thus,
we speculate that HpaF disturbs the host defense mechanisms that are
directed against invading pathogenic bacteria, thereby delaying
symptom development . Interestingly, although hpaF was
expressed at high levels in XVM2 medium, we did not detect secreted
HpaF by Western blot analysis (J.-G . Kim and I . Hwang, unpublished
data) . Assuming that HpaF is indeed an effector protein, this
indicates that HpaF may not be stable in the culture medium that we
used . Noël et al . also failed to detect the HpaF homolog in X .
campestris pv . vesicatoria, and they concluded that hpaG
RNA was not translated under the conditions used (33) .
The region downstream from the Hrp PAI core region of X . axonopodis
pv . glycines contains three genes, hrpF, hpaF, and tRNAArg .
It has been reported that the hrpF mutant has a typical hrp
phenotype and that HrpF is an effector protein in X . campestris
pv . vesicatoria that is not crucial for the secretion of other
effector proteins (38) . Since we obtained similar results
with X . axonopodis pv . glycines (J.-G . Kim and I . Hwang,
unpublished data), we believe that HrpF does not affect the secretion
of other effector proteins into the supernatant in the secretion
assay and that it may have other functions that are crucial to
full pathogenicity and the ability to induce HRs in nonhost plants .
In this regard, it is worth considering the model proposed by
Rossier et al., which proposes that HrpF functions as a translocator
of effector proteins into the host cell (38) . The findings
that the hrpW homologs of P . syringae and Erwinia
amylovora are located between the hrpE and hrpF
genes in X . campestris pv . campestris and that the tRNAArg
gene is absent from both X . campestris pv . campestris and
X . oryzae pv . oryzae indicate that this region varies depending
on the species and pathovar .
The region upstream from the hrcC gene showed variability in
five Xanthomonas species and encoded effector proteins, and
in inserion sequence elements . All of the Hpa proteins in the
region, i.e., HpaH, HpaG, and HpaC, influenced the pathogenicity of
X . axonopodis pv . glycines . Since similar phenotypes have been
observed for mutants of X . campestris pv . vesicatoria and
X . oryzae pv . oryzae (33, 51), we
believe that these genes contribute to pathogenicity on different
levels . The findings that hpaH was expressed at a very low
level under XVM2 conditions and that the hpaH mutant lost the
ability to induce HR in pepper plants indicate that small amounts of
the HpaH protein can mediate effector functions . Nonetheless, the
exact role of HpaH in the interactions between X . axonopodis
pv . glycines and nonhost plants remains to be elucidated .
Interestingly, the hpaC mutant elicited HRs in pepper and
tomato plants but not in Chinese cabbage . This result implies that
HpaC functions in a specific interaction between the bacterium and
Chinese cabbage .
Given the fact that both ends of the Hrp PAI core region vary
depending on the species and pathovar, we believe that the concept of
tripartite mosaic structures composed of a cluster of type III
secretion genes and bounded by exchangeable effector and conserved
effector loci (as shown for P . syringae pathovars) is not
applicable to xanthomonads . It appears that the core region of the
xanthomonad Hrp PAI is highly conserved and, unlike the Hrp PAI of
P . syringae, both flanking regions are relatively diverse .
In addition, we sequenced approximately 10 kb extending the end of
the tRNAArg gene contiguously from pGA4 . We found that the
gene arrangement in this region is the same as that in X .
axonopodis pv . citri but differs from that of X . campestris
pv . campestris . No repeat sequences, insertion sequences, mobile
elements, or plasmid genes were found downstream from the tRNAArg
gene in X . axonopodis pv . glycines or X . axonopodis pv .
citri . In X . campestris pv . campestris, the IS1478
transposase was located 8.5 kb downstream from hrpF .
Interestingly, we found a truncated insertion sequence element
showing 76% similarity with ISxcC1 transposase in the 47-codon
interval between the hpaF and tRNAArg genes in the
two X . axonopodis pathovars . Since we only observed part of
the insertion sequence element and a frameshift mutation in the
element, we believe that this could be evidence that PAI is unstable,
as suggested by Hacker et al . (21) . Therefore, we
believe that this tRNAArg gene of X . axonopodis pv .
glycines is the right end of the Hrp PAI, as suggested by the fact
that about 75% of the virulence genes associated with bacterial
pathogenicity are flanked by tRNA genes (23) .
When we sequenced approximately 10 kb extending the end of the
hpaH gene contiguously from pGA33, the gene arrangement in the
two X . axonopodis pathovars was identical, while it was dissimilar
in X . campestris pv . campestris . Several conserved hypothetical
proteins were found upstream from hpaH in the two X . axonopodis
pathovars . Since our Tn3-gus mutants, such as 4-12 and 9-14,
retained wild-type phenotypes, we believe that this region is
not part of Hrp PAI . Taking the data together, we believe the region
between the hpaH and tRNAArg genes delimits the Hrp PAI
of X . axonopodis pv . glycines .
Zhu et al . reported that the Hpa1 of X . oryzae pv . oryzae resembled
the harpins of P . syringae pathovars and Erwinia species and
the harpin-like PopA of R . solanacearum and showed that the
hpa1 mutant of X . oryzae pv . oryzae had reduced
pathogenicity (51) . Recently, Hpa1 homologs were
found in X . campestris pv . vesicatoria, X . axonopodis
pv . citri, and X . campestris pv . campestris (13,
33) . XopA of X . campestris pv . vesicatoria is
a type III-secreted effector protein that is necessary for both
growth in planta and full avirulence (33) . Nevertheless, it
is not clear if either Hpa1 or XopA is an HR elicitor on nonhost
plants . Noël et al . reported that an XopA-glutathione S-transferase
fusion protein did not induce an HR-like response in tobacco
leaves (33) . Here, we report that HpaG is a true HR elicitor,
with activity equivalent to that of the Erwinia harpin HrpN,
and that HpaG induces HRs in various nonhost plants .
This is the first HR-eliciting protein identified in xanthomonads .
Similar to the phenotype of the hrpN mutant of Erwinia amylovora,
the hpaG mutant that carried HrpG and HrpX induced negligible
HRs in tobacco plants . However, the hpaG mutant induced HRs
in pepper and tomato plants, and HpaG failed to elicit HRs in
tomato and Chinese cabbage . This suggests that there are specific
interactions between X . axonopodis pv . glycines and nonhost
plants and that various elicitor proteins are responsible for
inducing HR on nonhost plants . This hypothesis is supported by the
recent finding that a homolog of HrpW, which is a harpin protein in
Erwinia amylovora and P . syringae pathovars, was found
during whole genome sequence analysis of two Xanthomonas
species (13) .
Among the HpaG homologs of xanthomonads, only HpaG from X . axonopodis
pv . glycines exhibited a true harpin-like elicitor activity .
Although all of the homologs exhibited high-level identity at the
amino acid level, interesting differences were seen in the amino acid
alignment of HpaG and XopA . XopA lacked 16 amino acid residues that
corresponded to positions 59 to 74 in HpaG of X . axonopodis
pv . glycines . We believe that this discrepancy is critical for HpaG
homologs to act as elicitors on nonhost plants . Currently, we are
attempting to determine the critical amino acid residues in HpaG that
confer HR activity .
The wild-type strain 8ra of X . axonopodis pv . glycines and the
other strains tested did not induce HRs in tobacco plants . The
interactions of plants and plant-pathogenic bacteria have long been
considered peculiar (26, 35) .
Unexpectedly, we found that cells of X . axonopodis pv .
glycines required additional copies of hrpG and hrpX on
multicopy plasmids to induce HR in tobacco plants . A similar
phenomenon was observed during the mutational analysis of hrpG
of X . campestris pv . vesicatoria (49) . Three
mutations in the hrpG gene of X . campestris pv . vesicatoria
rendered constitutive the expression of hrp genes in medium
that would normally suppress this expression and induced HR in
tobacco plants (N . tabacum cv . Xanthi), while the wild-type
strain induced only a weak chlorotic and necrotic reaction 2 to 3
days after infection (49) . Therefore, we believe that the
hrpG and hrpX genes are expressed at very low levels when
X . axonopodis pv . glycines interacts with tobacco cells and that
this results in very low expression levels of all of the genes
under the control of HrpG and HrpX . We conclude that the expression
levels of hrpG and hrpX in tobacco plants are important for
inducing HR in plants . It will be interesting to discover the
limiting factors in tobacco plants that cause low-level expression of
hrpG and hrpX .
We thank Tae-Jin Choi for raising polyclonal antibodies to HpaG and
S . W . Hutcheson for providing the P . syringae strains .
This work was supported by grant no . R01-2000-000-00207-0 from the
Basic Research program of the Korean Science & Engineering Foundation
and by grant no . CG1411 from the Crop Functional Genomics Center of
the 21st Century Frontier Research Program, which is funded by the
Ministry of Science and Technology of the Republic of Korea . J.-G.K.,
C.-H.Y., and E.J . are recipients of graduate fellowships from the
Ministry of Education as part of the Brain Korea 21 Project .
The first two authors contributed equally to this work and should
be considered joint first authors .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: School of Agricultural
Biotechnology, Seoul National University, Suwon 441-744, Korea . Phone: 82 31 290
2445 . Fax: 82 31 294 5881 . E-mail:
ingyu@snu.ac.kr .
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