植物病原细菌致病性的当前概念

Christian Boucher, Stéphane Genin, Matthieu Arlat
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引用次数: 12

摘要

使细菌成为植物病原体的分子决定因素是什么?在过去的10-20年里,在回答这个问题方面取得了重要进展。在传染病发现后不久的20世纪初,人们开始了对致病性的第一次研究。这些早期的研究主要依赖于生物化学,并导致发现几个主要的致病性决定因素,如毒素和水解酶,它们控制着主要疾病症状的产生。从这些开创性的研究中,产生了一种简单的致病性观点。人们认为只有几种功能就足以将细菌转化为病原体。当现代分子遗传学技术被用于分析致病性时,这种观点迅速改变。致病性决定因素的现代分析利用了致病菌单倍体基因组相对简单的组织。通过创建非致病性突变体,鉴定了大量控制细菌-宿主相互作用的基因。这些基因是宿主定植或症状产生所必需的。尽管在这些过程中运动性和趋化性的作用尚不清楚,但很明显,农杆菌与植物细胞的强烈附着是有效植物转化和疾病的先决条件。通过分子遗传学方法确定的其他重要致病因素包括水解酶,如果胶酶和纤维素酶,它们不仅为细菌提供营养,而且还促进病原体侵入宿主组织。胞外多糖在致病性中的确切作用仍在讨论中,但已经确定它对诱导青枯病(Ralstonia solanacearum)引起的萎蔫症状至关重要。将入侵细菌的效应蛋白转运到宿主细胞中是最近出现的一个新的中心概念。在植物致病菌中,蛋白质易位是通过细菌中hrp基因编码的所谓“III型分泌机制”进行的。这些基因存在于革兰阴性植物致病菌的所有主要类群的代表中,除了农杆菌。这些基因中的大多数在哺乳动物(包括人类)的病原体中都有对应的基因,它们在致病性中也起着核心作用。此外,最近的证据表明,“IV型分泌机制”将细菌蛋白注入宿主细胞。这种机制最初被发现参与了将t-DNA从农杆菌转移到植物细胞中,最近被证明可以在幽门螺杆菌和布鲁氏菌等哺乳动物病原体中转运致病性蛋白。从病原体到宿主细胞的蛋白质运输的发现彻底改变了我们对致病性的概念。首先,它出乎意料地建立了植物和动物病原体的基本致病性策略保护。其次,这一发现改变了我们对致病性总体策略(或机制)的看法,尽管我们仍然认为最终结果是利用宿主细胞营养成分。我们设想了一种更微妙的方法,而不是从外部杀死宿主细胞,即病原体将效应蛋白注入宿主细胞,从而在宿主细胞生物学中产生有利于病原体的变化。鉴定宿主体内的效应蛋白及其功能和相应的分子靶点是一项新的挑战,将有助于制定新的疾病控制策略。
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Concepts actuels sur la pathogénie chez les bactéries phytopathogènes

What are the molecular determinants that make a bacterium a plant pathogen? In the last 10–20 years, important progress has been made in answering this question. In the early 20th century soon after the discovery of infectious diseases, the first studies of pathogenicity were undertaken. These early studies relied mostly on biochemistry and led to the discovery of several major pathogenicity determinants, such as toxins and hydrolytic enzymes which govern the production of major disease symptoms. From these pioneering studies, a simplistic view of pathogenicity arose. It was thought that only a few functions were sufficient to transform a bacterium into a pathogen. This view rapidly changed when modern techniques of molecular genetics were applied to analyse pathogenicity. Modern analyses of pathogenicity determinants took advantage of the relatively simple organization of the haploid genome of pathogenic bacteria. By creating non-pathogenic mutants, a large number of genes governing bacterium–host interactions were identified. These genes are required either for host colonization or for the production of symptoms. Even though the role of motility and chemotaxis in these processes is still unclear, it is clear that a strong attachment of Agrobacterium to plant cells is a prerequisite for efficient plant transformation and disease. Other important pathogenicity factors identified with a molecular genetic approach include hydrolytic enzymes such as pectinases and cellulases which not only provide nutrients to the bacteria but also facilitate pathogen invasion into host tissues. The precise role of exopolysaccharide in pathogenicity is still under discussion, however it is has been established that it is crucial for the induction of wilt symptoms caused by Ralstonia solanacearum. Trafficking of effector proteins from the invading bacterium into the host cell emerged recently as a new central concept. In plant pathogenic bacteria, protein translocation takes place through the so-called ‘type III secretion machinery’ encoded by hrp genes in the bacterium. These genes are present in representatives of all the major groups of Gram negative plant pathogenic bacteria except Agrobacterium. Most of these genes have counterparts in pathogens of mammals (including those of human) and they also play a central role in pathogenicity. Additionally, recent evidence suggests that a ‘type IV secretion machinery’ injects bacterial proteins into host cells. This machinery, originally found to be involved in the transfer of t-DNA from Agrobacterium into plant cells, was recently shown to translocate pathogenicity proteins in pathogens of mammals such as Helicobacter pylori and Brucella. Discovery of the trafficking of proteins from the pathogen into host cells revolutionized our conception of pathogenicity. First, it rather unexpectedly established the conservation of basic pathogenicity strategies in plant and animal pathogens. Second, this discovery changes our ideas about the overall strategy (or mechanism) of pathogenicity, although we still think the end result is exploitation of host cell nutritive components. Rather than killing the host cell from outside, we envision a more subtle approach in which pathogens inject effector proteins into the host cell to effect a change in host cell biology advantageous to the pathogen. Identification of the effector proteins, of their function and of the corresponding molecular targets in the host is a new challenge which will contribute to the conception of new strategies to control diseases.

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