Xinya Du, Pengyue Li, Changqiu Fan, Jingjing Tian, Yang Lin, Jiatao Xie, Jiasen Cheng, Yanping Fu, Daohong Jiang, Meng Yuan, Xiao Yu, Kenichi Tsuda, Bo Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
A biofilm lifestyle is critical for bacterial pathogens to colonize and protect themselves from host immunity and antimicrobial chemicals in plants and animals. The formation and regulation mechanisms of phytobacterial biofilm are still obscure. Here we found that the protein Ralstonia solanacearum resistance to ultraviolet C (RuvC) is highly abundant in biofilm and positively regulates pathogenicity by controlling systemic movement in tomato xylem. RuvC protein accumulates at the later stage of biofilm development and specifically targets Holliday junction (HJ)-like structures to disrupt the biofilm extracellular DNA (eDNA) lattice, thus facilitating biofilm dispersal. Recombinant RuvC protein can resolve extracellular HJ to prevent bacterial biofilm formation. Heterologous expression of R. solanacearum or Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae RuvC with plant secretion signal in tomato or rice confers resistance to bacterial wilt or bacterial blight disease, respectively. Plant chloroplast-localized HJ resolvase monokaryotic chloroplast 1 (MOC1), which shares structural similarity with bacterial RuvC, shows a strong inhibitory effect on bacterial biofilm formation. Relocalization of SlMOC1 to apoplast in tomato roots leads to increased resistance to bacterial wilt. Our novel finding reveals a critical pathogenesis mechanism of R. solanacearum and provides an efficient biotechnology strategy to improve plant resistance to bacterial vascular disease. The bacterial pathogen Ralstonia solanacearum secretes endonuclease RuvC, which degrades mature biofilm by targeting the lattice formed by cruciform extracellular DNA. This helps bacterial dispersal, pathogen spread in plant xylem and virulence.
期刊介绍:
Nature Plants is an online-only, monthly journal publishing the best research on plants — from their evolution, development, metabolism and environmental interactions to their societal significance.