HOST-SPECIFIC SYMPTOMS AND INCREASED RELEASE OF XANTHOMONAS-CITRI ANDXANTHOMONAS-CAMPESTRIS PV MALVACEARUM FROM LEAVES ARE DETERMINED BY THE 102-BP TANDEM REPEATS OF PTHA AND AVRB6, RESPECTIVELY

Citation
Yn. Yang et al., HOST-SPECIFIC SYMPTOMS AND INCREASED RELEASE OF XANTHOMONAS-CITRI ANDXANTHOMONAS-CAMPESTRIS PV MALVACEARUM FROM LEAVES ARE DETERMINED BY THE 102-BP TANDEM REPEATS OF PTHA AND AVRB6, RESPECTIVELY, Molecular plant-microbe interactions, 7(3), 1994, pp. 345-355
Citations number
60
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences","Biothechnology & Applied Migrobiology
ISSN journal
08940282
Volume
7
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
345 - 355
Database
ISI
SICI code
0894-0282(1994)7:3<345:HSAIRO>2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
Six avirulence genes (avrB4, avrb6, avrb7, avrBIn, avrB102, and avrB10 2) found in Xanthomonas campestris pv. malvacearum strain XcmH1005 and a host-specific pathogenicity gene (pthA) found in X. citri belong to an avr/pth gene family and are characterized by tandemly arranged, 10 2-bp repeats in the central portions of the genes. Marker exchange mut agenesis and complementation experiments revealed that avrb6 was requi red for XcmH1005 to cause severe water-soaking and subsequent necrosis in susceptible Acala-44 cotton lines, An average of 240 times more ba cteria were released onto the cotton leaf surface from water-soaked sp ots caused by XcmH1005 than from those caused by an isogenic avrb6(-) strain, strongly indicating a role for avrb6 in pathogen dispersal. Ho wever, avrb6 did not affect in planta bacterial growth rate or yield. By constructing chimeric genes among pthA, avrB4, avrb6, avrb7, avrBIn , avrB101, and avrB102, the 102-bp tandem repeats of the genes were fo und to determine the gene-for-genes specificity of the avirulence reac tions on cotton. Tn addition, the repeat regions of avrb6 and pthA det ermined their specificity in enhancing water-soaking of cotton and cau sing cankers on citrus, respectively. When the native promoters of eac h gene were replaced by the Escherichia coil lacZ promoter, the hypers ensitive response elicited in resistant host lines was stronger in all cases tested, while the pathogenic specificities of avrb6 for cotton and pthA for citrus were unaltered. These results indicate that some m embers of this avr/pth gene family may help condition host range by in creasing the release of Xanthomonas cells from the mesophyll to the le af surface, leading to increased dispersal on specific hosts.