- Volume 145, Issue 4, 1999
Volume 145, Issue 4, 1999
- Physiology And Growth
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RpoS-dependent stress tolerance in Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Summary: Pseudomonas aeruginosa is able to persist during feast and famine in many different environments including soil, water, plants, animals and humans. The alternative sigma factor encoded by the rpoS gene is known to be important for survival under stressful conditions in several other bacterial species. To determine if the P. aeruginosa RpoS protein plays a similar role in stationary-phase-mediated resistance, an rpoS mutant was constructed and survival during exposure to hydrogen peroxide, high temperature, hyperosmolarity, low pH and ethanol was investigated. Disruption of the rpoS gene resulted in two- to threefold increase in the rate of kill of stationary-phase cells. The rpoS mutant also survived less well than the parental strain during the initial phas of carbon or phosphate-carbon starvation. However, after 25 d starvation the remaining population of culturable cells was not significantly different. Stationary-phase cells of the RpoS-negative strain were much more stress resistant than exponentially growing RpoS-positive cells, suggesting that factors other than the RpoS protein must be associated with stationary-phase stress tolerance in P. aeruginosa. Comparison of two-dimensional PAGE of the rpoS mutant and the parental strain showed four major modifications of protein patterns associated with the rpoS mutation.
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- Systematics And Evolution
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Nuclear rDNA phylogeny in the fungal genus Verticillium and its relationship to insect and plant virulence, extracellular proteases and carbohydrases
More LessSummary: Phylogenetic relationships among 18 isolates in the genus Verticillium, representing 13 species of diverse econutritional groups (pathogens of insects, plants, mushrooms, nematodes and spiders, and sparobes), were examined by using sequences from the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and small nuclear (NS) rRNA regions. The isolates were also assessed for their abilities to infect insect larvae (Galleria mellonella) and to cause necrosis in alfalfa (Medicago sativa), and for their proteolytic, chitinolytic and pectinolytic activities. The phylogenetic data suggested that Verticillium is polyphyletic in origin and is therefore a form genus. However, the phylogenetic tree supported the plant pathogens (V. dahliae, V. albo-atrum and V. nigrescens) as a clade. The alfalfa isolate of V. albo-atrum (isolate 595) was an interesting outlier to the main body of plant pathogens as it clustered with the insect pathogen V. indicum. Strains of V. lecanii and V. indicum were able to infect insects and are present in divergent groups in the consensus tree, suggesting that the ability to infect insects may have evolved independently many times. Similarly, the nematophagous Verticillium species appear to have evolved independently along several different routes and one isolate, V. chlamydosporium, was able to infect insects. V. albo-atrum, V. nigrescens and V. dahliae all produced high levels of enzymes capable of degrading pectin, a major component of plant cell walls. The ability to excrete pectinase was a broad indicator of the ability to produce lesions on alfalfa. In the plant pathogens, the functions of a broad-spectrum protease were assumed by trypsins which degrade Bz-AA-AA-Arg-NA substrates (Bz, benzoyl; AA, various amino acids; NA, p-nitroanilide). The insect pathogens and mushroom pathogen (V. fungicola) were characterized by production of high levels of subtilisin-like proteases active against a chymotrypsin substrate (succinyl-Ala2-Pro-Phe-NA) and the inability to clear pectin. The insect and mushroom pathogens, and several nematode pathogens, were distinguishable from the plant pathogens in their ability to produce chitinases.
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- Corrigenda
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Volumes and issues
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