91ɫAPP

2
A RUDN University Biologist Described How a Harmless Bacterium Turns into a Phytopathogen

A RUDN University Biologist Described How a Harmless Bacterium Turns into a Phytopathogen

A researcher from RUDN University suggested that Xanthomonas bacteria that are harmful to plants might have developed from a nonpathogenic related species by receiving virulence genes from other species of bacteria.

The bacteria of the genus Xanthomonas are phytopathogens and cause diseases on dozens of crops including wheat, rice, cabbage, tomatoes, fruit trees, and fodder grasses. However, some representatives of the same genus are not pathogens: though they live on leaves and stems, they only consume the plant secreted organic compounds and dust particles. It is yet unknown why some Xanthomonas bacteria are pathogenic, and some are not.

A biologist from RUDN University explored the following theory. The ancestors of these bacteria could have been harmless and borrowed pathogenic genes from other bacterial species. The researcher and his colleagues compared 32 strains of Xanthomonas arboricola, a species that includes many non-pathogenic strains. Bacteria were collected from tomatoes, oilseeds, sunflowers, and barley to be identified and cultivated on a nutrient substrate. Then, bacterial suspension was made to inoculate the leaves of various crop plants.

All studied strains turned out to be harmful to at least one crop. The genome of strain 3004 (the most aggressive one that infected barley, wheat, oilseed and vegetable brassicas, tomato, walnut, and sunflower) was sequenced, and a set of specific genes was studied in other strains. However, none of the strains appeared to contain the so-called ‘molecular syringe’ genes—a mechanism of the T3SS transportation system that Xanthomonas pathogens use to attack plant cells. Without this mechanism, the bacteria are suggested to be nonpathogenic. However, the experiment proved them to cause diseases and even death of plants. Therefore, this group of Xanthomonas has alternative way of pathogenicity.

The research team suggested that it could have happened due to lateral gene transfer: a process in which a bacterium receives genetic material from other microorganism, not from its direct ancestors. A key pathogenic factor in all studied strains was the VirE protein that belongs to T4SS, a different bacterial secretion system. The gene that codes this protein could have been borrowed from another species. Before that, X. arboricola strains could have been harmless for the plants they lived on.

“A consensus about the evolution of the genus Xanthomonas hasn’t been reached yet. Some believe that Xanthomonas bacteria had initially been pathogenic, but then some of them lost virulence genes. However, our results support a different point of view. The genome of X. arboricola that we sequenced looks highly mosaic, i.e. has many genes similar to other species. We believe that the ancestor strain of X. arboricola could have been harmless for plants until it received T4SS and T3SS genes by means of lateral transfer,” said Prof. Alexander Ignatov, DSc in Biology, from the Department of Agrobiotechnology at RUDN University.

The results of the study were published in .

International Projects View all
Scientific Conferences View all
12 Dec 2024
About 200 participants from Russia and 20 countries met at the National Interdisciplinary Scientific Seminar with International Participation “Law in Medicine. Medicine in Law: Points of Contact”. The subject was “Happy Motherhood: unsolved problems of obstetrics, gynaecology and perinatology”.
138
Similar newsletter View all
20 Apr
A volunteer of the Red Army and head of the veterinary medicine course — Matilda Mityaeva's combat and scientific path

Matilda Pavlovna Mityaeva was born in 1925. In November 1942, she volunteered for frontline duty. She participated in the Great Patriotic War from November 1942 to June 1945 as part of the 53rd Infantry Division of the 475th Infantry Regiment. She was wounded twice.

25
20 Apr
RUDN University Team – the 1st place in the all-russian competitive selection of scientific projects “Technologies for human health”

The team led by Sergey Zyryanov, Head of the Department of General and Clinical Pharmacology, became the winner of the All-Russian competition of scientific projects "Technologies for Human Health".

37
20 Apr
RUDN University Scientific Agenda to 2030: New Programme for R&D and Innovation Activities Development

RUDN University constantly adapts to the changes of the modern world and responds to challenges flexibly. This allows us to keep the standard of a world-class research university. The sphere of science is no exception. Peter Dokukin, Head of the Research Division, presented the updated R&D Programme at the meeting of the RUDN University Academic Council.

24
Similar newsletter View all