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Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, 111 Koshland Hall, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720-3102
Received 28 May 2007/ Accepted 16 July 2007
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Regulation of siderophore biosynthesis appears to be highly fine-tuned, with multiple layers of control, including repression by Fe2+-Fur under iron-rich conditions, siderophore-dependent amplification via TonB-dependent siderophore receptor/transporters (such as FpvA) or AraC transcriptional regulators (such as PchR), and posttranscriptional regulation by antisense RNAs (8, 66, 76). Emerging evidence also indicates a link between quorum sensing (cell density-dependent regulation) and siderophore biosynthesis. For example, quorum-sensing Pseudomonas aeruginosa mutants exhibit reduced pyoverdin (Pvd) production (69). Furthermore, dual regulation of siderophore biosynthesis by iron and oxidative stress has been observed in certain cases (e.g., catecholate siderophore biosynthesis by Azotobacter vinelandii [71]), consistent with the capacity of intracellular siderophores to function as cytoprotective antioxidants by limiting the generation of highly reactive hydroxyl radicals produced via the Fenton reaction.
In terms of pathogenesis, the importance of siderophores in bacterial virulence on mammalian hosts has been well demonstrated. For example, yersiniabactin (Ybt) is required for full virulence of Yersinia pestis and Klebsiella pneumoniae infections of mice (6, 46), and Pvd is needed for virulence of P. aeruginosa in burned mice (51). Siderophore synthesis and utilization is under constant selective pressure as hosts evolve means to counteract pathogenic iron acquisition by siderophores and bacteria develop counterevasive strategies (33). For example, the mammalian protein siderocalin binds catecholic siderophores such as enterobactin and bacillibactin, making them ineffective in bacterial iron acquisition.
A number of bacteria synthesize multiple high-affinity siderophores of different structural classes, allowing them to bypass host-evolved defenses and/or serve distinct functional roles. For example, Bacillus anthracis synthesizes both the 2,3-catecholate siderophore bacillibactin and the unusual citrate-3,4-catecholate siderophore petrobactin, whose unique structure is not recognized by siderocalin (1). As expected, B. anthracis mutants in bacillibactin synthesis exhibit no defect in mouse virulence, whereas petrobactin mutants exhibit reduced virulence (17). In the case of A. vinelandii, in contrast to synthesis of the Pvd-like siderophore azotobactin, catecholate siderophore synthesis is under dual regulation by iron and oxidative stress, consistent with its cytoprotective antioxidant role (71). Another example is the probiotic Escherichia coli strain Nissle 1917, which produces four siderophores: the catecholates enterobactin and salmochelin, the hydroxamate aerobactin, and the mixed-type siderophore Ybt. These siderophores exhibit maximal production at different pHs, in agreement with their relative affinities for iron(III) at these pHs (72). Furthermore, an E. coli N1917 Ybt– mutant exhibited reduced growth in competition with the wild-type strain at neutral but not acidic pHs, consistent with increased Ybt production and higher affinity for iron at neutral pHs (72).
In contrast to mammalian pathosystems, siderophore production by phytopathogens and their role in virulence on plant hosts has not received much attention. A clear role for siderophores in plant-pathogen interactions was first established for the pectinolytic enterobacterium Dickeya dadantii, formerly known as Erwinia chrysanthemi, the causative agent of soft rot on a great variety of plants (29, 30), and has been recently observed for several fungal phytopathogens (28, 57). D. dadantii 3937 infection requires two structural classes of high-affinity siderophores, chrysobactin and achromobactin, with mutants in either high-affinity iron transport system compromised in their virulence on the African violet (Saintpaulia ionantha) (34). In contrast, single-siderophore biosynthetic mutants in other bacterial phytopathogens have not exhibited virulence defects under the conditions tested. For example, Pseudomonas syringae pv. syringae B301D, a pathogen of stone fruit trees such as wet cherry (Prunus avium L.), does not require Pvd for virulence on immature sweet cherry fruits (19). Similarly, virulence of Agrobacterium tumefaciens B6 and C58 strains, which cause crown gall disease, was not significantly compromised by the inability to produce either agrobactin (47) or an uncharacterized high-affinity siderophore (65). There are a number of possible reasons for the lack of virulence phenotype for these siderophore mutant strains, including the compensatory action of another high-affinity siderophore and/or the plant growth environment or particulars of the infection assay.
In order to fully explore the likely complex role of siderophores and iron in phytopathogenesis, we employ the use of a widely studied pathosystem with extensive genomic and genetic resources available for both the bacterium and plant hosts. Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato DC3000, a model phytopathogen (11), causes bacterial speck of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum, formerly Lycopersicon esculentum) (22), a worldwide disease of economic significance, and is also highly virulent on the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana (44, 77). In particular, the use of the P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000- Arabidopsis pathosystem allows one to readily and directly explore and assess bacterial and plant components mediating the interaction, as both bacterial and plant mutant lines can be easily constructed or are available (see, e.g., reference 3).
The genome of P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 contains genes required for the synthesis of the mixed-type siderophore Ybt, derived from salicylic acid (SA), and the fluorescent siderophore Pvd (11). Whereas the role of bacterial Ybt in mammalian pathogenesis has been extensively studied, this is the first investigation into the role of Ybt in plant pathogenesis. As SA accumulates in plants such as Arabidopsis in response to pathogens including P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000, and pathogen-induced SA accumulation is required for basal plant host defense responses including the expression of a myriad of defense-related genes (24), we also wanted to assess the possibility of cross-talk between bacterial and plant SA production and utilization pathways. Therefore, our initial focus was to determine whether P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 produces SA and Ybt and the role these compounds may play in virulence on tomato and Arabidopsis plant hosts. We then extended our studies to examine Pvd production and the comparative synthesis, regulation, and functional roles of these compounds in P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 pathogenesis.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Construction of the P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 pchA mutant.
A 534-bp pchA fragment lacking 5' and 3' coding regions was amplified using Turbo Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene) and the primers 5'-CACCAGGCACAAGGGCAATACCG-3' and 5'-GCGCTGCATGACCTGTTCC-3'. The product was ligated into the pENTR/D-TOPO vector (Invitrogen) and recombined into the pLVC-D destination vector (pLVC18 [DNA Plant Technologies, Oakland, CA] with a gateway cassette cloned into the EcoRI site) in a gateway LR reaction (Invitrogen). The resulting pLVC-D+ics vector was then mated into DC3000 from E. coli DH5
in a triparental mating. Mated cells were grown on KB agar with 10 µg/ml tetracycline, and single colonies were isolated. The correct insertion of the vector into the genome was confirmed by PCR using pchA primers outside of the cloned region (5'-AACCCGCTGCCATCATTCA-3' and 5'-CCTTAACGGGGGTCAGCAGA-3') and primers annealing to the attB1 and attB2 cassette regions of the pLVC-D vector (5'-AGTTTGTACAAAAAAGCAGGCT-3' and 5'-CTTTGTACAAGAAAGCTGGGT-3', respectively). In culture under our experimental conditions (without antibiotic selection), we have found reversion of the pchA mutation to be minimal, as we have never detected SA, Ybt, or the presence of the intact pchA gene in pchA mutant cultures. For the in planta bacterial growth assays, the opportunity for selection is very limited, as there is little net growth (few generations).
Siderophore quantification and purification. For initial confirmation of siderophore identity by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) analysis, high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) fractions for putative peaks were dried and submitted to the Vincent Coates Foundation Mass Spectrometry Laboratory (Stanford University). Ybt-Fe3+ was extracted from the supernatant (after addition of 100 µM FeCl3) of a low-iron P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 stationary-phase culture with 1 volume of ethyl acetate. The sample was dried and resuspended in 10% acetonitrile and then analyzed by HPLC. An acetonitrile gradient of 10 to 20% was applied from 1 to 6 min, 20 to 50% from 6 to 10 min, 50 to 65% from 10 to 20 min, 65 to 100% from 20 to 25 min, and 100 to 10% from 25 to 35 min. A fraction was collected around a dominant A385 peak and submitted for LC-MS. For Pvd-Fe3+ analysis, 100 µM FeCl3 was added to supernatant from a low-iron wild-type DC3000 stationary-phase culture, and the supernatant was then concentrated 10-fold by evaporation with heating and vacuum. The sample was then analyzed by HPLC method 1 (14). A fraction was collected around the dominant A400 peak and submitted for LC-MS. For all Ybt and Pvd experiments, a Prevail C18 5u 150- by 4.6-mm (Alltech) column maintained at 27°C was used on a Shimadzu SCL-10AVP series HPLC system equipped with a Shimadzu SPD-10AVP photodiode array detector and a Shimadzu RF-10AXL fluorescence detector.
For subsequent siderophore quantifications, 1-ml aliquots of liquid cultures were collected and 1 mM FeCl3 was added. The mixture was then centrifuged at a relative centrifugal force of 20,000 for 2 min at 4°C. For each run, 50 µl of supernatant was analyzed by HPLC. The buffer used was 17 mM formic acid (pH 3.35), and an acetonitrile gradient of 0 to 2% was applied from 5 to 7 min, 2 to 70% from 7 to 20 min, 70 to 80% from 20 to 22 min, and 80 to 0% from 22 to 27 min. The flow rate was 1 ml/min. Ybt was quantified by the absorbance at 385 nm, with a standard curve using a Ybt standard provided by Chaitan Khosla (Stanford University) (59) and the reported molar extinction coefficient (
= 2,884 [26]). Pvd-Fe3+ was quantified by the absorbance at 400 nm and the reported molar extinction coefficient (
= 20,000 [18]). The Ybt-Fe 3+ peak was identified by its elution time (
17.8 min) and absorbance spectrum compared with the Ybt standard. Consistent with published work on the atypical Pvdpss (18), multiple distinct peaks were detectable as Pvd by absorbance spectrum with elution times of
10.3, 10.75, and 11.4 min. Data are reported as means and standard deviations of three replicates. The complete experiment was performed twice with similar results.
SA extraction and quantification.
Liquid cultures of P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 and PAO1 strains were grown to stationary phase in low- and high-iron cultures. HCl was added to 25-ml supernatant samples from these cultures to a pH of 2 to 2.3. Samples were then extracted with 1 volume of ethyl acetate and evaporated to dryness in the dark and under a vacuum. Samples were then resuspended in 20% methanol and analyzed by HPLC using a 5 µM 15-cm by 4.6-mm ID Supelcosil LC-ABZ+Plus column (Supelco) preceded by an LC-ABZ+Plus guard column maintained at 27°C. The buffer used was 15% acetonitrile in 25 mM KH2PO4 (pH 2.5), and an acetonitrile gradient was applied. The flow rate was 1 ml/min. The concentration of acetonitrile was increased linearly to 20% over 6 min, followed by isocratic flow at 20% for 10 min, followed by a linear increase from 20% to 55% over 17.5 min, a linear increase from 43% to 66% over 5 min, isocratic flow at 66% for 2.5 min, a linear decrease from 66% to 15% over 5 min, and isocratic flow at 15% for 5 min. SA was detected by fluorescence at 407 nm after excitation at 305 nm and quantified with the calibration curve y = 4418.2x, with y in fluorescence area units and x in nanograms of SA. The SA peak was determined by elution time (
21 min) as determined by analysis of positive controls containing SA. Experiments were repeated three times with similar results.
Detection of Ybt in planta.
Arabidopsis thaliana ecotype Columbia-0 (Col-0) plants were grown for 5 weeks in a 12-h light/dark cycle with photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) of
150 µEm–2 s–1 and sprayed with a 10 mM MgSO4-0.05% Silwet L77 solution containing 5 x 108 CFU/ml of P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 or the DC3000 pchA mutant. Negative-control treatments were sterile. Mature leaves from 12 plants were harvested in liquid nitrogen after 5 days. Leaves were then ground in 10 ml of H2O and extracted twice with 1 volume of ethyl acetate. The organic layer was dried and the samples resuspended in H2O and filtered before HPLC purification of the Ybt-Fe3+-containing fraction, as described above. Samples were submitted to the Vincent Coates Foundation Mass Spectrometry Laboratory (Stanford University) for LC-MS analysis and detection of Ybt-Fe3+. The complete experiment was performed twice with similar results.
MS. Samples for LC-MS analysis were resuspended in water and analyzed with a Thermo Fischer Alliance HPLC with a Luna C18 2.1- by 150-mm column and a Thermo Fisher LCQ Classic Mass Spectrometer at the Vincent Coates Foundation Mass Spectrometry Laboratory (Stanford University). Confirmation of Ybt-Fe3+ and Pvd employed the separation gradients used to isolate the compounds (above) with electrospray ionization (ESI) positive-ion MS analysis. MS-MS fragmentation was performed on selected dominant ion peaks for further confirmation of compound identity.
For the in planta Ybt assays, the buffer used was 10% acetonitrile, and a gradient to 100% acetonitrile was applied. Isocratic flow at 10% for 1 min was followed by a linear increase to 20% over 5 min and then a linear increase to 50% over 4 min, a linear increase to 65% over 10 min, a linear increase to 100% over 5 min, isocratic flow at 100% for 3 min, a linear decrease to 10% over 5 min, and isocratic flow at 10% for 2 min. ESI positive-ion spectra from 50 to 1,500 m/z were collected for Ybt-containing fractions. Samples from plants infiltrated with pchA mutant DC3000 and MgSO4 had no detectable Ybt-Fe3+. ESI-positive spectra are shown for the same fraction as the sample from wild-type DC3000-infiltrated plants. MS-MS fragmentation was performed on selected dominant ion peaks to further verify Ybt-Fe3+.
Bacterial growth in planta.
Arabidopsis thaliana var. Col-0 and ics1-2 (eds16-1) Arabidopsis mutant (79) plants were grown for 5 weeks in a 12-h light/dark cycle with PAR of
150 µEm–2 s–1, and leaves were infiltrated with a 10 mM MgSO4 solution containing 5 x 105 CFU/ml of DC3000 strains. Mature leaves (trimmed to 1 cm2) were then collected at 0, 1, or 3 days in 1 ml of 10 mM MgSO4 and ground with a plastic pestle. Appropriate dilutions were then plated with a spiral plater (model D; Spiral Systems Instruments, Inc., Bethesda MD) on KB agar plates with 100 µg/ml rifampin and 15 µg/ml natamycin (fungicide), and bacterial colonies were counted with a laser colony counter (model 500A; Spiral System Instruments, Inc.). Tomato variety Bonny Best plants were grown for 6 weeks in a greenhouse and vacuum infiltrated with 10 mM MgSO4 containing 5 x 105 CFU/ml of DC3000 wild-type or mutant strains. Leaflets of approximately 0.5 g (fresh weight) were ground in 1 ml of 10 mM MgSO4 solution at 0 and 3 days. Plating and counting of colonies was performed as with Arabidopsis. Data are reported as means and standard deviations of three replicates. Complete experiments were performed twice with similar results.
RNA isolation and RT. RNA was collected from 5 x 108 CFU of liquid cultures using an RNeasy mini kit (QIAGEN) and DNase (QIAGEN) treated according to the manufacturer's instructions. cDNA was synthesized from 1 µg of RNA using a QuantiTect reverse transcription (RT) kit (QIAGEN) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Negative-control reactions lacked only reverse transcriptase. Resultant cDNAs were used in quantitative PCR (qPCR) experiments.
qPCR. cDNA samples were used as a template for qPCR of pchA, ybtE, and pvdA. PCR efficiencies for the different primer sets were determined to be comparable. PCR was performed with a QuantiTect SYBR green PCR kit (QIAGEN) and an ABI PRISM 7700 real-time cycler (ABI); 50-µl reactions were prepared according to the manufacturer's instructions using 50 ng of template cDNA. The primers used for the real-time reactions were 5'-CAGTTGCTTCATGGGTGCAT-3' and 5'-GCCATGGTGTGCAATTGATC-3' for ics, 5'-GCAGGTGACCGGGTCATG-3' and 5'-GCAAACAATGCGCAGACAAA-3' for ybtE, 5'-GGCGATGTTCGAATTCAACA-3' and 5'-CCGCCAAGGCTTTCAAGA-3' for pvdA, and 5'-CGCTAGTAATCGCGAATCAGAA-3' and 5'-GACGGGCGGTGTGTACAAG-3' for 16S rRNA. Gene expression was normalized to 16S rRNA for each sample. Complete experiments were performed twice with similar results.
| RESULTS |
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The enhanced growth of both the pchA and wild-type P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 strains in the ics1 mutant compared with wild-type Arabidopsis is consistent with previous results and the role of plant-produced SA in limiting pathogen growth (54). As the DC3000 and pchA mutant strains both exhibited similarly enhanced growth (
1 log10 at 3 days postinoculation [dpi]) on the ics1 mutant compared with wild-type Arabidopsis in side-by-side experiments, our results also indicate that SA produced by P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 cannot compensate for the lack of pathogen-induced plant-produced SA in the ics1 Arabidopsis mutant.
Ybt is produced by P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 in planta. Given our lack of growth or altered disease phenotype for the pchA mutant on susceptible plant hosts, we sought to determine whether Ybt was produced by P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 in planta. We were not able to specifically examine SA produced by DC3000 in planta, as our estimates for SA produced by DC3000 (<1 pmol SA/leaf, assuming in planta SA production similar to that of iron-limited cultures [e.g., see Fig. 3]) are well below the uninduced levels of free SA produced by Arabidopsis.
To determine whether Ybt was produced in planta, we extracted DC3000 and pchA mutant-infected Arabidopsis leaves at 5 dpi, analyzed these samples by HPLC, and collected the putative Ybt fractions based on Ybt retention time. The samples were then analyzed by ESI-MS and compared with our ESI-MS results from Ybt extracted from culture supernatant (Fig. 1C). The dominant Ybt ions (m/z, 535.1 [monomer]; m/z, 1,068.7 [dimer]) were detected in extracts from DC3000-sprayed plants but not in extracts from plants sprayed with the pchA mutant or a buffer control (Fig. 5). Furthermore, MS-MS fragmentation of the 535 ion of the DC3000-infected Arabidopsis leaf sample resulted in an essentially identical fragmentation pattern to that for MS-MS analysis of Ybt extracted from DC3000 culture supernatants (data not shown). We observed production of both the –186 Ybt fragment of m/z 349, as described previously (26), and the m/z 489 ion thought to arise from decarboxylation of the molecular ion of the FeH+ adduct (12, 58). These results indicate that (i) Ybt is synthesized by P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 during its infection of Arabidopsis, (ii) synthesis of Ybt in planta requires a functional DC3000 pchA gene, and (iii) plant-derived SA is unable to restore bacterial Ybt production in the pchA mutant.
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As no growth defect (and in fact an enhancement) was observed for the pchA mutant as iron was progressively more limited, we determined whether Pvd production was altered in the pchA mutant compared with the wild type. We observed enhanced Pvd in culture supernatants of the pchA mutant compared with the wild type with increasing dipyridyl (Fig. 7D). However, the pchA mutant also grew better than the wild type under these conditions (Fig. 7C), and cell-normalized Pvd levels are not significantly higher in the pchA mutant than in the wild type. In the experiment presented in Fig. 7D, it appears that there may even be less Pvd on a cell basis in the pchA mutant than in the wild type at 150 and 200 µM dipyridyl; however, repeated experiments indicate that cell-normalized Pvd is not significantly different for the wild type and the mutant.
Conditional experiments under stringent iron limitation (150 µM dipyridyl). Because we saw no growth defect in the pchA mutant in planta (Fig. 4) or in the pchA mutant in culture under conditions of progressive iron limitation (Fig. 7C), we assessed whether the pchA mutant might exhibit a growth defect in culture under a variety of physiologically relevant conditions (Fig. 8). These conditional experiments were performed as described above but with variation in our standard temperature, pH, and redox conditions.
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In addition to differing temperatures, pathogens in the leaf apoplast may also experience changes in reducing or oxidizing (redox) conditions. Plants produce reactive oxygen species in addition to SA as part of the immune response to pathogens, including oxidants such as H2O2 (24). Reductant concentrations can also vary as a function of environmental conditions, including light, temperature, abiotic stress, and pathogen attack (10). Therefore, we examined growth of DC3000 and the pchA mutant under more oxidizing (additional H2O2) or reducing (additional DTT) conditions in culture. Though H2O2 and DTT negatively impacted the growth of both strains, once again the pchA mutant exhibited enhanced growth compared to the wild type (Fig. 8). Indeed, the relative growth of pchA compared with the wild type was reproducibly higher under these conditions than under any other condition tested.
pH has been shown to impact bacterial growth and siderophore production (72). It also has a dramatic impact on the affinity of siderophores for iron, with differential impacts on distinct siderophores (72). Therefore, we were interested in determining the influence of pH on the growth of the pchA mutant versus that of the wild type to determine whether Ybt plays a greater functional role at a pH other than 7.2 (our standard conditions). At pH 7.2, Ybt is likely to have a higher affinity for Fe3+ than Pvd, as pFe Ybt is 1036 at pH 8.5 (58) and pFe Pvd is 1032 at pH 10, with decreasing affinity at lower pHs (i.e., pFe Pvd is 1025 at pH 7) (18). The plant apoplast is more acidic than our standard pH, with typical values ranging from pH 5.3 to 6.7 (see, e.g., reference 35). In Arabidopsis, a resting apoplastic pH of 6.3 was reported (35), and environmental stresses can alter apoplastic pH significantly (i.e., by 1 to 1.5 pH units [31]). Therefore, we tested the growth of DC3000 and the pchA mutant at pH 5.7, 6.5, and 7.2. Though lower pH resulted in reduced growth for both strains, we did not observe a significant growth defect in the pchA mutant compared to the wild type (Fig. 8). At pH 6.5, the pchA mutant exhibited enhanced growth compared to the wild type, similar to that at pH 7.2. At pH 5.7, bacterial growth of both strains was severely compromised, with fivefold-lower growth than at pH 7.2. This could be due to ineffective iron acquisition, as both Pvd and Ybt are predicted to be dramatically less effective at binding Fe3+ at lower pHs (18, 72).
In summary, under all conditions tested with stringent iron limitation (150 µM dipyridyl), the pchA mutant exhibited enhanced growth compared with that of the wild type.
Siderophore production under low-iron conditions. As discussed above, as iron was progressively less available (50 to 200 µM dipyridyl), the pchA mutant exhibited increasingly enhanced growth compared to wild-type P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000. Levels of potentially available iron in the leaf apoplast can range from 1.6 µM to 6 µM, with the lower values being associated with iron deficiency (48, 49). Therefore, we decided to examine relative growth of the wild type versus the pchA mutant as we added progressively more iron (e.g., from 0 to 50 µM FeCl3). Unlike our findings when dipyridyl was added to the culture medium, we found that the wild-type and pchA mutant strains exhibited similar growth when 0 to 50 µM of FeCl3 was added. At 10 µM added FeCl3, iron no longer limited growth and we observed a fivefold increase in growth in both strains that was consistent from 10 to 50 µM FeCl3 (data not shown). In both the added-dipyridyl and added-iron experiments, the wild-type and pchA mutant strains grew similarly with no added dipyridyl or iron. Therefore, we decided to further examine the role of Ybt and Pvd under a low-iron condition in which bacterial growth is still partially limited and siderophores are produced but mutant and wild-type DC3000 strains exhibit similar growth.
As shown in Fig. 9A, under this low-iron condition, both Ybt and Pvd are detected in the P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 culture supernatant by 10 h. Pvd levels increase with time through the 48-h time course, whereas Ybt levels peak at 24 h with
90% of maximal Ybt at 48 h. Through this time course, the wild-type DC3000 and pchA mutant strains grew equally well (Fig. 9B). To determine whether enhanced Pvd levels in the pchA mutant might compensate for the loss of SA and Ybt synthesis, we measured Pvd in culture supernatants of DC3000 versus pchA mutant through this time course. To our surprise, we found reduced Pvd in culture supernatants of the pchA mutant (Fig. 9C). In total, these results suggest that Ybt is not required for growth under these low-iron conditions. Furthermore, it appears that excreted Pvd in DC3000 is more than sufficient to bind available iron in the medium, as a 30% reduction in Pvd in the culture supernatant of the pchA mutant did not compromise its growth.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Role of Ybt in P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 pathogenesis. As Ybt is synthesized by P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 in planta, why did the pchA mutant exhibit no fitness or virulence defect? Possible explanations include (i) the pchA mutant utilizes plant-produced SA to make Ybt, (ii) the DC3000 siderophore Pvd is able to functionally compensate for loss of Ybt production under these conditions, or (iii) under the conditions tested, Ybt or high-affinity siderophores in general are not required for bacterial virulence in planta.
We addressed the first possibility experimentally by assessing whether the pchA mutant exhibited a growth or disease phenotype when inoculated or sprayed onto the SA biosynthetic mutant ics1. If plant-produced SA restored pchA Ybt formation in wild-type plants, then the ics1 mutant would be unable to restore Ybt production and a growth defect for the pchA mutant would be observed on the ics1 mutant plants. Instead, no growth difference was observed for the pchA mutant versus DC3000 on the ics1 plants. We then confirmed this directly by examining in planta Ybt production. Whereas Ybt was detected in Arabidopsis leaf extracts infected with DC3000, it was not detected in pchA-infected leaf extracts. Thus, under the conditions examined, plant-produced SA does not rescue the pchA mutation. This finding might also suggest that P. syringae pv. tomato exposure to Arabidopsis SA is low (<<10 µM) in this virulent interaction, in contrast to experiments demonstrating higher apoplastic SA in an avirulent interaction (42).
To address the second explanation for the lack of a virulence defect for the pchA mutant (i.e., Pvd compensates for lack of Ybt production), we undertook a series of experiments. We were first interested in determining whether there were conditions under which Ybt was preferentially synthesized over Pvd by DC3000. We examined Ybt and Pvd production (assessed from culture supernatants) as iron was progressively more limited (through the addition of 2,2'-dipyridyl), progressively more available (with added FeCl3), under a variety of relevant environmental conditions (acidic pH, redox stress, temperature stress), and over time. Generally, Pvd and Ybt levels were correlated and of a similar magnitude, with Pvd typically 1.5- to 2-fold higher on a nanomolar basis. However, the low-iron time course experiment showed that while Ybt and Pvd accumulate similarly in early cultures, over time Pvd becomes the more prevalent siderophore (Fig. 9A). Indeed, at the late stationary phase time point (48 h), Pvd levels continue to increase while Ybt decreases. This difference in Pvd versus Ybt is not likely due to increased iron limitation, as this pattern is not observed with increasing dipyridyl (Fig. 7), but may be due to differential regulation or utilization (discussed below). We also examined growth of the pchA mutant versus the wild type in the above experiments and found that the mutant grew similarly to wild-type DC3000 under iron-rich or low-iron conditions but exhibited enhanced growth under more stringent iron-limiting conditions (i.e., with added dipyridyl).
In the phytopathogen D. dadantii 3937, chrysobactin or achromobactin biosynthetic mutants partially compensate for loss of one siderophore by compensatory changes in the timing and amount of the remaining siderophore produced under iron-limiting conditions in vitro (34). Therefore, we were interested in determining whether we would see enhanced Pvd in culture supernatants of the pchA mutant to compensate for lack of Ybt production. This does not seem to be the case. Under stringent low-iron conditions in which the pchA mutant grows better than wild-type DC3000, the pchA mutant does overproduce Pvd but not on a cell-normalized basis. In fact, under conditions in which the two strains grow similarly, the pchA mutant produces less Pvd than does the wild type. For example, though the pchA mutant and DC3000 grew equally well in the low-iron time course experiment (Fig. 9), Pvd levels for the pchA mutant were less than those of the wild type throughout the time course (10 to 48 h). This suggests that for the pchA mutant, the available Pvd (
70% of that for the wild type) was sufficient to supply the iron needed for growth. In summary, under the conditions tested, Pvd is synthesized with Ybt and could alone be sufficient for iron acquisition in vitro and therefore in planta.
As mentioned above, it is also possible that high-affinity siderophores are not required for P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 iron acquisition in the plant apoplast under the growth and environmental conditions assessed, thereby resulting in no virulence defect for the pchA mutant. Published values for Fe3+ in the leaf apoplast range from 1.6 to 6 µM Fe3+ with the iron complexed predominantly by citrate (9, 48, 49). P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 contains a putative FecA ferric dicitrate transporter (PSPTO1207). As most bacteria require 10–6 to 10–7 M levels of bioavailable iron for optimal growth (39), it is possible that ferric citrate alone could provide sufficient iron for bacterial growth in the leaf apoplast. This can be compared to mammalian pathogens such as PAO1, which can import host iron-binding compounds such as heme to overcome the minute levels of available Fe3+ in mammalian biological fluids, estimated to be less than 10–18 M (38, 60, 78).
Future work with a Ybt– Pvd– biosynthetic P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 double mutant should enable us to assess the above possibilities. If Pvd functionally compensates for lack of Ybt production in the pchA mutant, then the double mutant should show severely compromised growth in planta. If reduced growth is not observed in the double mutant, then, under these conditions, neither high-affinity siderophore is required.
Ybt is not required for optimal bacterial growth or virulence under the tested environmental and assay conditions but may still play an important role under more ecologically relevant conditions. For example, in our experiments, plants were grown in controlled environments where environmental stresses such as temperature fluctuations, drought, and dramatic changes in light intensity did not occur. In addition, our plants were grown under standard conditions without mineral or nutrient limitation. Finally, these plants were not exposed to the typical suite of interactors: other pathogens, symbionts, and pests. Therefore, the synthesis of SA and Ybt by P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 may still confer a benefit in colonizing the leaf surface or apoplast in a field setting. In addition, we examined compatible interactions in which DC3000 is virulent on the susceptible plant host and programmed cell death associated with avirulent hypersensitive response is not elicited. It is possible that Ybt production by P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 is beneficial in the context of a robust plant immune response, as apoplastic SA accumulation appears to be significantly higher in response to avirulent pathogens (>100 µM [42]). As there is the potential for these levels of apoplastic SA to be cytotoxic and to have a role in activating defenses, the ability of DC3000 to utilize this SA in Ybt synthesis could confer additional benefits.
To elucidate growth conditions under which Ybt contributes to fitness, we carried out a series of bacterial growth experiments in culture. We examined conditions of progressive iron limitation and additional stresses associated with the leaf apoplast such as oxidative stress, acidic pH, and temperature stress. Surprisingly, we found that the pchA mutant exhibited enhanced growth compared with wild-type DC3000 as iron was progressively more limited and with these additional stresses. This growth advantage conferred by the pchA mutation compared with the wild type in stringent iron-limited culture suggests that Ybt biosynthesis can be detrimental. The effect has at least three nonexclusive explanations. First, if Pvd production is sufficient for maximal iron acquisition under these conditions, then the pchA mutant would have enhanced growth due to the elimination of an unnecessary metabolic cost. Second, if Pvd is the more effective iron scavenger under these conditions and Ybt production interferes with Pvd function, then the pchA mutant would have enhanced growth when iron is most limited and Pvd function most critical. Third, if Ybt (and/or SA) has a role independent of iron acquisition that results in decreased fitness under these conditions, then the pchA mutant would have enhanced growth due to release from this effect.
We did not find previous reports of enhanced growth of a high-affinity siderophore biosynthetic mutant under iron-limiting conditions. However, it is widely acknowledged that loss of virulence factor production is associated with enhanced fitness for bacteria grown in culture where these factors do not provide sufficient benefit. In addition, fitness costs are associated with the production of biosynthetically complex secondary metabolites such as antibiotics when their synthesis provides no competitive advantage; therefore, their synthesis is typically finely regulated (see, e.g., reference 20). In terms of assessing the relative cost of Ybt versus Pvd use by P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000, it should be noted that in P. aeruginosa, Pvd is thought to be efficiently recycled from the intercellular space to the extracellular medium after iron release, thereby dramatically reducing its associated synthesis cost (37). This is contrasted with ferric enterobactin, where the iron-bound siderophore must be imported into the cytoplasm prior to iron release (45). In this case, the imported Fe-enterobactin is hydrolyzed or chemically modified, permanently lowering its affinity for Fe(III). Though it is unknown how Ybt is utilized, the P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 Ybt cluster contains two putative inner-membrane ABC subfamily B transporters that are highly similar to ybtP and ybtQ of Y. pestis (Fig. 2). In Y. pestis, these ABC transporters have been shown to function in Ybt uptake, suggesting intracellular transport of Ybt (32). Furthermore, the time course experiment shows Pvd (but not Ybt) accumulation in culture supernatant over time at late stationary phase (Fig. 9). This result could be explained by the recycling (and thus accumulation) of Pvd contrasted with Ybt turnover, though other explanations are possible (as discussed below). Nevertheless, if Pvd were efficiently recycled by DC3000 while Ybt was not, under conditions where Pvd alone is sufficient for iron acquisition, a Ybt– mutant could exhibit enhanced growth, as observed. Similarly, under conditions where Pvd was the more effective siderophore, if Ybt competed with Pvd for iron or otherwise interfered with Pvd function, then a Ybt– mutant would have enhanced growth. However, we cannot exclude Ybt (and/or) SA production negatively affecting fitness independently of iron acquisition under these conditions.
The possibility that Ybt (and/or SA) produced by P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 plays a role other than functioning directly in iron acquisition is intriguing, particularly in the context of plant infection. For example, SA has the ability to alter gene expression in both bacteria and plants. In plants, it acts as a phytohormone responsible for the transcriptional induction of myriad defense-related genes, resulting in systemic acquired resistance (24). In bacteria, SA can impact bacterial virulence through the induction of intrinsic multiple antibiotic resistance (2, 63), enhanced mutation rates, and/or reduced motility (61). In addition, bacterial production of SA by root-associated bacteria may facilitate induced systemic resistance responses in plants (5, 16, 23). Therefore, we were interested in determining whether SA produced by DC3000 in the leaf apoplast could induce defensive responses in the infected leaf. In the ics1 SA biosynthetic mutant, DC3000 growth is enhanced
10- to 30-fold at 3 dpi compared with growth in wild-type Arabidopsis plants (54). If SA produced by DC3000 partially rescues the SA-deficient Arabidopsis phenotype, we might expect to see even greater bacterial growth of the pchA mutant compared with DC3000 on the ics1 mutant plants. We observed no significant difference in bacterial growth for the pchA versus wild-type DC3000 strains on the ics1 mutant (Fig. 10C). This result was consistent with our expectations based on the very low level of excreted SA produced by DC3000 in culture. Interestingly, we detected about 10-fold-less excreted SA in supernatants of P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 than in P. aeruginosa PAO1 on a cell-normalized basis (data not shown), possibly suggesting a selective pressure on this plant pathogen to limit excreted SA.
Regulation of siderophore production and utilization in P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000. In addition to the potential for SA to act as a signaling molecule, high-affinity siderophores themselves can act as signaling molecules. For example, Pvd induces expression of its own biosynthetic genes as well as other virulence factors, including exotoxin A and endoprotease in P. aeruginosa (74). This Pvd signaling function is mediated by an additional N-terminal domain of the TonB-dependent Pvd receptor (e.g., FpvA of P. aeruginosa PAO1) (43, 66). To determine whether Ybt might act as a signaling molecule using a mechanism similar to that for Pvd, we examined the expression of the Ybt biosynthetic gene ybtE in the Ybt– pchA mutant. If Ybt production is required for full induction of expression of the Ybt biosynthetic cluster, we would expect to see little or significantly reduced expression of ybtE in the pchA mutant. However, we found similarly induced expression of ybtE in wild-type and pchA mutant strains under iron-limiting conditions (Fig. 10B), suggesting that Ybt gene expression is not regulated by Ybt-dependent signaling. Furthermore, the putative P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 TonB-dependent Ybt receptor FyuA (PSPTO2605), located in the Ybt cluster, does not contain the N-terminal extension required for siderophore-dependent signaling (see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material); thus, amplification of ybt gene expression is unlikely to occur via this mechanism. In contrast, there is the potential for Pvd-dependent signaling via a TonB-dependent Pvd receptor in DC3000 as one (FpvA-1; PSPTO2151) of the two adjacent putative P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000 Pvd receptors does contain this additional N-terminal domain.
AraC transcriptional regulators can also mediate siderophore-dependent amplification of siderophore biosynthesis (52). In the case of pyochelin production in P. aeruginosa, the AraC transcriptional regulator (PchR) directly interacts with ferric pyochelin and thereby mediates ferric pyochelin amplification of pyochelin biosynthesis (52). Perhaps the AraC transcriptional regulator (PSPTO2606) adjacent to the Ybt cluster in DC3000 mediates positive amplification of Ybt biosynthesis by ferric Ybt. However, as stated above, we found wild-type induction of ybtE expression in the absence of Ybt formation, suggesting that this is not the case.
In contrast to the atypical lack of siderophore-dependent amplification of expression of siderophore biosynthetic genes observed for Ybt, we observed canonical repression of both Ybt and Pvd biosynthetic gene expression in the presence of high iron levels (50 µM FeCl3). This repression is likely mediated by the ferric uptake regulator FUR (56).
Though we typically observed similar patterns of Pvd and Ybt production under the conditions we assessed in culture, in stationary-phase culture supernatants grown under low-iron conditions, we observed enhanced Pvd compared with declining Ybt (Fig. 9). This could be explained by a cell density-dependent regulation of Pvd versus Ybt biosynthesis, as quorum-sensing P. aeruginosa mutants exhibit reduced Pvd production (69). Alternatively, accumulation of a particular product in stationary-phase cultures could differentially impact Pvd versus Ybt metabolism, perhaps by inhibiting Ybt synthesis. Another possibility is that recycling of Pvd (but not Ybt) to the extracellular medium could result in increasing Pvd levels in the culture supernatants over time (as discussed earlier).
Clearly, there is much to learn about the function and regulation of siderophores and their precursors in plant host-bacterial interactions. Here, we provide initial insights, tools, and directions to elucidate the function of SA and siderophore biosynthesis in the important and widely studied phytopathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato strain DC3000. The numerous genetic and genomic resources available for both DC3000 and the plant host Arabidopsis thaliana make this an extremely attractive pathosystem for elucidating the complex role of iron, SA, and siderophores in plant-pathogen interactions. In addition, the chemical cross-talk that is arguably more readily resolved in plant pathosystems (as numerous plants may be easily generated and assayed) may provide fundamental insights applicable to other host-microbe interactions. For example, Arabidopsis is capable of taking up the bacterial siderophore Fe3+-Pvd and utilizing it to rescue iron deficiency (73). As this implies recognition of the bacterial siderophore, it is also possible that plant recognition of specific bacterial siderophores could trigger plant immune responses. The phytopathogen could then respond by modifying the siderophore to evade host recognition or use it as a "Trojan horse" to deliver a toxin, as has been described for other systems (33). It is not known whether Ybt-Fe3+ can also be recognized and utilized by plants. However, it is clear that the ability of a given phytopathogen to produce multiple high-affinity siderophores is of great utility, as different siderophores have distinct affinities for iron (and other transition metals [75]), differential pH-dependent stability and affinity, and different associated costs and modes of regulation, and they may be under selective counter-evolutionary pressures with given hosts. We are excited by the prospect of resolving the impact of these features on the evolving functional roles of bacterial siderophores in a tractable plant pathosystem.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by University of California—Berkeley StartUp funds provided to M.C.W.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Published ahead of print on 27 July 2007. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
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