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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2003, p. 1018-1026, Vol. 185, No. 3
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.3.1018-1026.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Comparative Analyses of the Complete Genome Sequences of Pierce's Disease and Citrus Variegated Chlorosis Strains of Xylella fastidiosa
M. A. Van Sluys,1* M. C. de Oliveira,1 C. B. Monteiro-Vitorello,2 C. Y. Miyaki,1 L. R. Furlan,3,
L. E. A. Camargo,2 A. C. R. da Silva,4,
D. H. Moon,5 M. A. Takita,6 E. G. M. Lemos,7 M. A. Machado,6 M. I. T. Ferro,7 F. R. da Silva,8 M. H. S. Goldman,9 G. H. Goldman,10 M. V. F. Lemos,7 H. El-Dorry,4 S. M. Tsai,5 H. Carrer,2 D. M. Carraro,11 R. C. de Oliveira,12 L. R. Nunes,12 W. J. Siqueira,13 L. L. Coutinho,2 E. T. Kimura,14 E. S. Ferro,14 R. Harakava,15 E. E. Kuramae,16 C. L. Marino,17 E. Giglioti,18 I. L. Abreu,7 L. M. C. Alves,7 A. M. do Amaral,6,
G. S. Baia,14 S. R. Blanco,4 M. S. Brito,9 F. S. Cannavan,5 A. V. Celestino,13 A. F. da Cunha,19 R. C. Fenille,16 J. A. Ferro,7,
E. F. Formighieri,5 L. T. Kishi,7 S. G. Leoni,14 A. R. Oliveira,1 V. E. Rosa Jr.,8 F. T. Sassaki,17 J. A. D. Sena,7 A. A. de Souza,6,
D. Truffi,2 F. Tsukumo,19 G. M. Yanai,12 L. G. Zaros,2 E. L. Civerolo,20 A. J. G. Simpson,11 N. F. Almeida Jr.,21 J. C. Setubal,22 and J. P. Kitajima8,22,
Instituto de Biociências,1
Instituto de Química,4
Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas, Universidade de São Paulo, 05508-900 São Paulo,14
Escola Superior de Agricultura Luiz de Queiroz, Universidade de São Paulo, 13418-900, Piracicaba,2
Centro de Energia Nuclear na Agricultura, Universidade de São Paulo, 13400-970, Piracicaba,5
Centro de Citricultura Sylvio Moreira, Instituto Agronômico de Campinas, 13490-970, Cordeirópolis,6
Faculdade de Ciências Agrárias e Veterinárias, Universidade Estadual Paulista, 14884-900, Jaboticabal,7
Centro de Biologia Molecular e Engenharia Genética,8
Instituto de Biologia,19
Instituto de Computação, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, 13083-970, Campinas,22
Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências, e Letras,9
Faculdade de Ciencias Farmaceuticas, Universidade de São Paulo, 14040-901, Ribeirão Preto,10
Instituto Ludwig de Pesquisa Sobre o CÂncer, 01509-010, São Paulo,11
Núcleo Integrado de Biotecnologia, Universidade de Mogi das Cruzes, 08780-911, Mogi das Cruzes,12
Instituto Agronômico de Campinas, 13001-970, Campinas,13
Instituto Biológico, 04014-002, São Paulo,15
Faculdade de Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia,3
Faculdade de Ciências Agronômicas, Universidade Estadual Paulista, 18603-970, Botucatu,16
Instituto de Biociências, Universidade Estadual Paulista, 18618-000, Botucatu,17
Universidade Federal de São Carlos, 13600-970, Araras, São Paulo,18
Departamento de Computação e Estatistica, Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul, 79070-900, Campo Grande, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil,21
Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Parlier, California 93648,20
Received 12 July 2002/
Accepted 16 October 2002

ABSTRACT
Xylella fastidiosa is a xylem-dwelling, insect-transmitted,
gamma-proteobacterium that causes diseases in many plants, including
grapevine, citrus, periwinkle, almond, oleander, and coffee.
X. fastidiosa has an unusually broad host range, has an extensive
geographical distribution throughout the American continent,
and induces diverse disease phenotypes. Previous molecular analyses
indicated three distinct groups of
X. fastidiosa isolates that
were expected to be genetically divergent. Here we report the
genome sequence of
X. fastidiosa (Temecula strain), isolated
from a naturally infected grapevine with Pierce's disease (PD)
in a wine-grape-growing region of California. Comparative analyses
with a previously sequenced
X. fastidiosa strain responsible
for citrus variegated chlorosis (CVC) revealed that 98% of the
PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula genes are shared with the CVC
X. fastidiosa strain 9a5c genes. Furthermore, the average amino acid identity
of the open reading frames in the strains is 95.7%. Genomic
differences are limited to phage-associated chromosomal rearrangements
and deletions that also account for the strain-specific genes
present in each genome. Genomic islands, one in each genome,
were identified, and their presence in other
X. fastidiosa strains
was analyzed. We conclude that these two organisms have identical
metabolic functions and are likely to use a common set of genes
in plant colonization and pathogenesis, permitting convergence
of functional genomic strategies.

INTRODUCTION
Different microorganisms are able to survive in and to colonize
plant water-conductive vessels (xylem). The result of this association
is either beneficial or detrimental to the plant host. Of the
latter, an example is the association of
Xylella fastidiosa (
38) with diverse plant hosts.
X. fastidiosa is a fastidious,
insect-transmitted, xylem-inhabiting bacterium known to cause
several economically important diseases of both monocotyledonous
and dicotyledonous plants (
14,
17,
29). These diseases include
Pierce's disease (PD) of grapevine and citrus variegated chlorosis
(CVC), which have rather distinct symptoms and geographical
distributions.
PD, caused by certain strains of X. fastidiosa, is characterized by wilted, shriveled, raisin-like fruit and scorched leaves that detach, leaving bare petioles attached to the canes (37). The bark of affected canes may lignify or mature irregularly, leaving areas of brown bark tissue surrounded by green immature tissue. Delayed and stunted shoot growth occurs in the spring following infection, and chronically infected grapevines eventually die. This devastating disease is a major threat to the viability of the California wine industry. The PD X. fastidiosa strain, whose genome sequence is described here, was isolated in 1998 from a naturally infected grapevine in Temecula, Calif. CVC, on the other hand, is characterized by the presence of small hard fruits of no commercial value and conspicuous spotted chlorosis on the upper leaf surface, resembling the symptoms of zinc deficiency and occasionally accompanied by gum-like extrusions from the spots on the lower surface (4).
X. fastidiosa is phylogenetically placed at the base of the gamma group of Proteobacteria (36). Molecular analyses at the species level have revealed three distinct groups. The grapevine-infecting variants responsible for PD are found in one group, while the citrus-infecting variants responsible for CVC are found in another (6, 7, 16). Initial expectations, based on geographical distributions, host diversity, differential disease symptoms, and molecular analyses, were that organisms from the three groups would be sufficiently different to support taxonomic separation at the subspecies or pathovar level (17, 19, 24).
The genomic sequence of the PD X. fastidiosa Temecula strain has now been determined in order to further elucidate both the molecular basis of X. fastidiosa pathogenicity and the phylogenetic relationships among X. fastidiosa strains. Comparative analyses of the complete sequences and annotations of PD X. fastidiosa and an X. fastidiosa representative of the CVC group isolated from Brazil (33) revealed that these strains exhibit remarkably limited genomic variability and share 95.7% amino acid identity in equivalent regions. There are only three genomic rearrangements, two identified genomic islands, 41 PD X. fastidiosa and 152 CVC X. fastidiosa strain-specific genes, and some genes harboring frameshifts. Our analyses suggest that a common functional genomic strategy may be undertaken to identify means of controlling X. fastidiosa-induced diseases.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Genome sequence and assembly.
Total genomic DNA was isolated from the PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula
strain. The complete genome sequence was generated by using
a combination of ordered cosmid and shotgun strategies (
13).
Various shotgun libraries with different insert sizes (0.8 to
2.0 kb and 2.0 to 4.5 kb) were constructed from nebulized genomic
DNA cloned into pUC18, and a total of 102,348 sequences were
generated; 81% of these had at least 400 bases with a Phred
quality above 20 (
15), providing approximately 13-fold genome
coverage. A cosmid library (Lawrist vector) with inserts ranging
from 30 to 45 kb was constructed. A total of 2,752 cosmid ends
were sequenced; 63% of these had at least 300 bases with a Phred
quality above 20, providing approximately 26-fold genome coverage.
These cosmid ends were used in the scaffold, and 12 cosmids
were selected to be fully sequenced. Sequence gaps were identified
by linking information from forward and reverse reads and were
closed by primer walking, PCR sequencing, and insert subcloning.
Sequences from both ends of most cosmid clones were used to
confirm the orientation and integrity of the contigs. The sequences
were assembled by using the Phred+Phrap+Consed package (
15).
All consensus bases have a Phred quality of at least 20. There
are no unexplained high-quality discrepancies, and the overall
error estimate is less than 1 in every 10,000 bases. Most of
the sequencing was performed with BigDye terminators and ABI
Prism 3700 DNA sequencers.
Genome annotation and analysis.
Annotation was dependent primarily on open reading frame (ORF) identification by using GLIMMER (10), GeneMark (5), and alignment against the National Center for Biotechnology Information protein database. BLASTX searches were carried out to find additional putative protein-coding genes. All ORFs were inspected manually by the annotation team. For each ORF, links to Cluster of Orthologous Groups of Proteins (COG), Protein Family Database (PFAM), and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) were made available. RNA species were identified by using BLASTN (3), secondary structure analysis, and tRNAscan-SE (21). Domestic software was used in order to generate items such as gene maps, lists, comparative CVC X. fastidiosa and PD X. fastidiosa data, and GenBank submissions. For a full list of ORFs, gene maps, and comparative tables, refer to supplementary material at http://aeg.lbi.ic.unicamp.br/world/xfpd/.
Whole genomes of PD X. fastidiosa and CVC X. fastidiosa were compared at the nucleotide level by using the program MUMmer (11) with default values. At the amino acid level, the genomes were compared by using previously developed programs (33). Genes g and h were considered orthologs if h was the best BLASTP hit for g and vice versa, where the e-values were 10-5 or less. A gene was considered strain specific if it had no hits or the e-value was 10-5 or more in the other genome.
PCR analysis of genomic islands in different strains of X. fastidiosa.
Oligonucleotides were constructed for the genomic islands and their flanking regions. PCR analyses were carried out in duplicate in two different laboratories. For a full list of strains and primers, refer to supplementary material at http://aeg.l-bi.ic.unicamp.br/world/xfpd/.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The sequences have been deposited in GenBank with accession numbers AE009442 (chromosome) and AE009443 (plasmid).

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Genome features.
The PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula genome is composed of a single
large circular chromosome (2,519,802 bp) and a small plasmid,
pXFPD1.3 (1,345 bp), also reported by others for some PD
X. fastidiosa strains (
16). Table
1 shows a comparative summary
of the main genome features of PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula and
CVC
X. fastidiosa 9a5c. Major discrepancies between these two
strains consist of a 159,503-bp chromosome size difference and
the absence of large plasmid pXF51 in PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula.
The variation in the percentages of hypothetical ORFs observed
(0.8% for PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula and 4.4% for CVC
X. fastidiosa 9a5c) could be due to the difference in the genome size, as
explained below.
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TABLE 1. General genome features of X. fastidiosa Temecula, causal agent of PD, and X. fastidiosa 9a5c, causal agent of CVCa
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Of the 2,066 protein-coding genes annotated in PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula, 2,025 (98%) are also present in CVC
X. fastidiosa 9a5c. Of these orthologous genes, 94.5% have 80% or more amino
acid identity, with an average identity of 95.7%, as shown in
Fig.
1. This conservation is distributed along the whole chromosome,
and regions of lower identity tend to appear in clusters (Fig.
1). This level of protein identity is comparable to that observed
among the orthologous proteins of different
Escherichia coli strains (
27),
Helicobacter pylori strains (
1), and
Salmonella enterica serovars (
22) and thus supports a close relationship
between these two
Xylella strains. The most conserved PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula genes include all those that determine the
basic metabolism and cellular functions of the bacterium, which
we thus conclude are mostly identical to those previously described
for CVC
X. fastidiosa 9a5c (
33). Energy is generated by the
efficient utilization of carbohydrates, including cellulose,
but with no predicted catabolism of fatty acids or amino acids
as alternative energy sources. In contrast, a complete set of
biosynthetic pathways is present, permitting the synthesis of
all amino acids, purines, pyrimidines, and nucleotides as well
as an extensive array of cofactors and prosthetic groups. Transport
systems include those for carbohydrates, ions, amino acids,
and peptides as well as those for the extrusion of drugs and
toxins.
A total of 106 genes in the PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula genome
(5.2%), although shared with the CVC
X. fastidiosa 9a5c genome,
have amino acid identities of 20 to 80%. Among these are 58
genes that are found within phage-related regions and genomic
islands. In addition, 18 conserved hypothetical genes in the
vicinity of the hemolysin and hemagglutinin genes fall within
this group. Interestingly, among genes with assigned functions
that exhibited this higher level of divergence, we found some
that may be involved in
X. fastidiosa-plant host interactions,
including those for fimbrillins and hemagglutinins (attachment
and cell aggregation); colicin, hemolysin, and bacteriocin (toxins);
and drug resistance and DNA restriction and modification enzymes
(see supplementary material for a full list of genes). Thus,
there may have been more selective pressure for alterations
in these genes to enhance plant-specific bacterial colonization
capability. There are also genes in the two genomes that have
either a frameshift or an in-frame stop codon (Table
2), suggesting
that they are nonfunctional. The most intriguing of these is
the polygalacturonase precursor gene, which has a stop codon
in CVC
X. fastidiosa 9a5c but is intact in PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula. For two other partially sequenced
Xylella genomes
(
http://www.jgi.doe.gov/), no frameshift is observed within
the polygalacturonase precursor gene. Other than among
Xylella genomes, this gene shares 65% identity with its
Ralstonia solanacearum ortholog (
32); orthologs are also present in other necrogenic
plant pathogens, such as
Xanthomonas campestris pv.
campestris,
X. axonopodis pv.
citri, and
Erwinia carotova. This gene is
essential for the synthesis of cell wall-degrading enzymes that
facilitate intervessel migration. Its intact status in PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula may account for the more aggressive nature
of PD than of CVC (
2), where it is not essential for disease
development, since Koch's postulates for strain 9a5c were experimentally
fulfilled.
PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula has 41 strain-specific genes (1.9%),
while CVC
X. fastidiosa 9a5c has 152 such genes (6.8%) (Table
2). In both strains, more than half of these are hypothetical
or conserved hypothetical genes, and a significant proportion
are associated with mobile genetic elements. Among the PD
X. fastidiosa-specific genes with assigned functions are a hydrolase
gene with similarity to genes in
Xanthomonas (gi21113352),
Pseudomonas (gi15598992), and
Salmonella (gi16763691) and a gene for a type
II restriction and modification system most similar to that
of the cyanobacterium
Nostoc (gi547934). Genes for two other
proteins, proteic killer and HicA, are shared with
Nostoc (gi17232769)
and
E. coli (gi15804020). The CVC
X. fastidiosa-specific genes
with assigned functions include a gene for an O-antigen acetylase
that is involved in LPS modification and that is similar to
those found in
S. enterica (gi16761319),
Sinorhizobium meliloti (gi16761319),
Mesorhizobium loti (gi13474718),
Neisseria meningitidis (gi15795071), and
Pseudomonas (gi15600431) (
12,
34) and an additional
drug resistance translocase gene that is most similar to genes
identified in
Caulobacter crescentus (gi16127299),
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (gi15841836), and
M. loti (gi13472297). This gene
is located, along with 71 other specific genes, on the CVC-specific
island described below. The apparently diverse origins of the
specific genes with assigned functions in the two strains are
also reflected in conserved hypothetical genes that are similar
to the genes of a large, unrelated group of bacteria including
Xanthomonas,
Pseudomonas,
Ralstonia,
Listeria innocua,
Agrobacterium tumefaciens C58,
C. crescentus, and even, for one gene in CVC
X. fastidiosa, the distantly related eubacterium
Microscilla (gi14485002). It appears that individual genes have been accumulated
in phages and transferable islands during their passage through
many bacterial species before being incorporated within the
X. fastidiosa genome (
26).
Genome reorganization.
Alignment of the PD X. fastidiosa Temecula and CVC X. fastidiosa 9a5c chromosomes, starting from the putative origins of replication, highlighted three chromosomal regions of the two genomes that were translocated and inverted despite their overall identity (Fig. 2). All such reorganization events occurred at least 250,000 bp from the putative origin of replication (Fig. 2A), as previously observed for other bacterial species (18). These three large rearranged chromosomal regions and other small rearrangements were all flanked at one border by a putative phage-related integrase, suggesting that they were phage mediated. The PD X. fastidiosa Temecula chromosome harbors eight clusters of phage-related regions, Xpd1 to Xpd8, none of which is organized in a manner similar to that of the four CVC X. fastidiosa 9a5c prophages described previously (XfP1 to XfP4) (33). The Stretcher global alignment program (25) was used to determine the overall nucleotide identity in a given region, enabling analysis of similarity among the phage-related regions. The Xpd1 region shares 83 and 78% nucleotide identity with CVC X. fastidiosa 9a5c prophages XfP2 and XfP1, respectively. All of the other CVC X. fastidiosa 9a5c prophage regions share less than 50% nucleotide identity with the Xpd phage clusters. Three of the phage-related regions are specific to the PD X. fastidiosa genome, and one is involved in one of the large rearrangements mentioned above. Three phage-related regions (Xpd5, Xpd6, and Xpd8) are highly divergent from the equivalent regions in the CVC X. fastidiosa chromosome, while Xpd1 maintains the same borders as XfP4. We have not considered these phage-related regions to be strain specific due to the fact that we cannot determine whether the insertion events occurred prior to strain divergence. In addition, some genes are shared by these phage-related regions. Figure 2B is a schematic representation of the PD X. fastidiosa and CVC X. fastidiosa chromosomes illustrating the rearrangements and the relative positions of the prophage clusters.
Genomic islands.
Genomic islands specific to each genome were characterized on
the basis of marked decreases in protein identities, different
GC contents, and codon bias. Two of these islands, one specific
to each genome, have higher GC contents, and their relative
positions are indicated in Fig.
1. In PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula,
genomic island PD1 (giPD1) is 15.7 kb long, has 61.2% GC content,
and harbors an extra copy of a hemagglutinin gene with a phage-related
integrase at one end (Fig.
3A). In CVC
X. fastidiosa 9a5c, genomic
island CVC1 (giCVC1) is 67 kb long, has 63.3% GC content, and
is inserted within tRNA Gly-2 (Fig.
3B). The integrase immediately
adjacent to the tRNA Gly-2 gene is highly similar at the nucleotide
(93%) and protein (87%) levels to a previously described
Pseudomonas putida strain B13 integrase (
31) that is associated with the
P2 integrase/recombinase family. In
Pseudomonas, the integrase
is associated with a self-transmissible 105-kb
clc element that
carries the
clcRABDE genes encoding chlorocatechol-degradative
enzymes. It is interesting that different integrases can share
common integration target sites (
39). The integrase characterized
for giCVC1 is targeted to the glycine tRNA structural gene (
glyV),
like the integrase associated with the
Pseudomonas self-transmissible
element.
In an attempt to correlate the presence or absence of the genomic
islands with a disease phenotype, PCR analyses were performed
to characterize their distributions in different
X. fastidiosa strains. Primers were constructed for the island borders. Table
3 shows the giCVC1 distribution in 64 strains of
X. fastidiosa isolated from different hosts and different geographical regions.
The flanking regions of giCVC1 are the same as the corresponding
regions in the PD
X. fastidiosa Temecula genome, except that
the whole region is inverted relative to the origin of replication.
The use of the same flanking primers produced, after PCR amplification,
a product of 4,587 bp for the PD
X. fastidiosa genome, indicating
the absence of giCVC1. However, three distinct groups were identified
based on the sizes of the amplified products (Table
3). The
CVC group, which contains all or part of giCVC1, comprises most
of the tested Brazilian strains regardless of host (citrus,
coffee, hibiscus, and periwinkle). Surprisingly, the PD group,
which does not have giCVC1, was subdivided into two groups.
One group comprises strains isolated from grapevine, mulberry,
almond (ATCC 35870), and oleander, with an amplified fragment
of approximately 4.6 kb. The second group, comprising strains
isolated from plum in Brazil and the United States and from
almond (ATCC 700965), elm, oak, and periwinkle in the United
States, produced a smaller amplified fragment (2.9 kb). These
results are consistent with the existence of different groups
of strains of
Xylella in North America and South America, as
suggested previously (
8,
28), with the exception of the plum
strain isolated in Brazil. This strain had a pattern similar
to that of the North American strains, a fact that could be
indicative of its recent introduction into Brazil via infected
seedlings.
In PD
X. fastidiosa, giPD1 is located within the phage-related
region Xpd2 (Fig.
3A). PCR analysis of this region in 30 different
X. fastidiosa strains revealed a pattern more variable than
that obtained for the giCVC1 distribution. The presence or absence
of giPD1 could not be correlated with the groups described above,
as both PD and CVC strains may contain this island. Careful
inspection of the genome around giPD1 enabled us to characterize
a 68.8-kb region that could represent the ancient insertion
of a prophage and/or a conjugative transposon related to the
Tn
21 family. Transposon ends similar to those of Tn
5053 were
detected at both extremities of the proposed region, and a degenerate
copy of the transposase was also found within the island. Tn
5053 was originally described as a transposon which carries the mercuric
resistance operon described for
Xanthomonas (
20). One interpretation
of the PCR results is that giPD1 was already present in the
ancestral
Xylella genome prior to the divergence of the 30 strains
studied here and that the evolution of each strain, irrespective
of the plant host, was characterized by multiple losses from
this ancestral island. On the other hand, it seems that giCVC1
is limited to Brazilian
X. fastidiosa strains. Therefore, it
is reasonable to infer that this island is a recent acquisition
by the original strain that spread to South America that nevertheless
occurred prior to its expansion. It is interesting that part
of giCVC1 was also observed in
X. axonopodis pv.
citri (
9),
which causes citrus canker.
The biology of Xylella-induced disease is poorly understood, and the grouping of strains has been a strategy devised in part to develop effective disease management measures. Different techniques have been used to try to establish pathovar or subspecies categories not necessarily focused on the evolution of the group. Qin et al. (30) proposed the following natural groups of strains: 1, citrus and coffee; 2, grapevine, almond, and ragweed; and 3, elm, oak, and plum. Chen et al. (6) proposed three strain groups based on 16S ribosomal DNA sequences: 1, citrus and coffee; 2, grapevine and mulberry; and 3, elm, oak, peach, plum, and periwinkle. Based on our analysis of giCVC1, we propose three groups of strains: 1, citrus, coffee, and possibly other South American strains; 2, grapevine, mulberry, oleander, and some almond strains, all from North America; and 3, elm, oak, plum, periwinkle, and some almond strains, again all from North America. Hendson et al. (16) showed that with the exception of some almond strains, all X. fastidiosa strains isolated from the same host had identical sequences for the intergenic spacer of rRNA genes. The two almond strains that we examined are distinguished by the size of the amplified fragment corresponding to giCVC1 and by the presence of giPD1.
The presence of genomic islands in different closely related strains is known to represent the gain of adaptive traits by an organism; examples include the Mesorhizobium symbiotic island (35) and the LEE islands of enteropathogenic E. coli strains (23). The acquisition of such islands can result in evolution by quantum leaps. A comparative analysis of the two X. fastidiosa genomes permitted the identification of such islands in both genomes, although their adaptive functions remain to be demonstrated. Essentially all of the differences between the PD X. fastidiosa Temecula and CVC X. fastidiosa 9a5c genomes can be accounted for by the numbers and relative positions of clusters of phage-related genes and insertion or deletion events, among which giPD1 and giCVC1 are included. If prophage regions are excluded and rearrangements are reoriented, the genomes of both X. fastidiosa strains are very similar and colinear. We propose that the evolutionary divergence of the two sequenced X. fastidiosa strains is thus mainly due to lateral gene transfer mediated mostly by phage vectors. It is noteworthy, however, that there have been fewer lateral gene transfer events in the X. fastidiosa genomes than can be detected based on a comparison with E. coli strains (27). Despite the genome rearrangements, the most significant conclusion to be drawn from the sequencing of the PD X. fastidiosa Temecula genome is that many of the genes in the two X. fastidiosa strains are highly similar, including not only those involved in basic cellular housekeeping but also many of those likely to have a direct role in pathogenicity. This conclusion suggests that the diseases caused by different X. fastidiosa pathotypes most likely rely on the expression of a common set of genes to allow the bacteria to become established in planta. This possibility of common pathogenic mechanisms implies that functional genomics studies of the two organisms would share significant common ground, and their integration might accelerate advances in combating both PD and CVC. In this regard, critical cross-infection experiments with PD X. fastidiosa and CVC X. fastidiosa strains and reciprocal hosts would be of great immediate interest to evaluate this hypothesis.

ADDENDUM IN PROOF
The polygalacturonase gene was amplified and sequenced from
11 strains of
X. fastidiosa (see list in supplementary material).
Besides the CVC
X. fastidiosa 9a5c strain all the citrus and
coffee strains examined showed the same frameshift, while other
strains including mulberry, almond, and grape isolates did not
show the frameshift.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This project was funded by FAPESP (São Paolo, Brazil),
CNPq (Brasília, Brazil), USDA-ARS, American Vineyard
Foundation, and California Department of Food and Agriculture.
The DNA used was isolated by E. Civerolo at the University of California, Davis, and the sequencing was undertaken by the Agricultural and Environmental Genomics Group of the Organization for Nucleotide Sequencing and Analysis founded by FAPESP. We thank all of the technicians involved in this project.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Departamento de BotÂnica, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de São Paulo, R. do Matão, 277, 05508-900, São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil. Phone: 55(11)30917548. Fax: 55(11)30917724. E-mail:
mavsluys{at}usp.br.

Present address: Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuaria, Cordeiropolis, Brazil. 
Present address: Alellyx Applied Genomics, 13067-850, Campinas, Sãao Paulo, Brazil. 

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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2003, p. 1018-1026, Vol. 185, No. 3
0021-9193/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.185.3.1018-1026.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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