Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (Apr 2015)

Pantoea ananatis Utilizes a Type VI Secretion System for Pathogenesis and Bacterial Competition

  • Divine Y. Shyntum,
  • Jacques Theron,
  • Stephanus N. Venter,
  • Lucy N. Moleleki,
  • Ian K. Toth,
  • Teresa A. Coutinho

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI-07-14-0219-R
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 4
pp. 420 – 431

Abstract

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Type VI secretion systems (T6SSs) are a class of macromolecular machines that are recognized as an important virulence mechanism in several gram-negative bacteria. The genome of Pantoea ananatis LMG 2665T, a pathogen of pineapple fruit and onion plants, carries two gene clusters whose predicted products have homology with T6SS-associated gene products from other bacteria. Nothing is known regarding the role of these T6SS-1 and T6SS-3 gene clusters in the biology of P. ananatis. Here, we present evidence that T6SS-1 plays an important role in the pathogenicity of P. ananatis LMG 2665T in onion plants, while a strain lacking T6SS-3 remains as pathogenic as the wild-type strain. We also investigated the role of the T6SS-1 system in bacterial competition, the results of which indicated that several bacteria compete less efficiently against wild-type LMG 2665T than a strain lacking T6SS-1. Additionally, we demonstrated that these phenotypes of strain LMG 2665T were reliant on the core T6SS products TssA and TssD (Hcp), thus indicating that the T6SS-1 gene cluster encodes a functioning T6SS. Collectively, our data provide the first evidence demonstrating that the T6SS-1 system is a virulence determinant of P. ananatis LMG 2665T and plays a role in bacterial competition.