Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (Sep 1997)

Mobilization, Cloning, and Sequence Determination of a Plasmid-Encoded Polygalacturonase from a Phytopathogenic Burkholderia (Pseudomonas) cepacia

  • Carlos F. Gonzalez,
  • Elizabeth A. Pettit,
  • Victoria A. Valadez,
  • Ellen M. Provin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI.1997.10.7.840
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
pp. 840 – 851

Abstract

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Phytopathogenic strains of Burkholderia cepacia (synonym Pseudomonas cepacia) produce endopolygalacturonase, whereas strains of clinical and soil origin do not. Growth of a phytopathogenic strain (ATCC25416) at elevated temperatures resulted in nonpectolytic derivatives that were either cured of a resident plasmid or contained a plasmid of reduced mass. The resident 200-kb plasmid (pPEC320) in strain ATCC25416 was tagged with Tn5-Mob. The pPEC320∷Tn5-Mob (pPEC321) plasmid was mobilized in B. cepacia strains of soil and clinical origin. Transconjugants containing pPEC321 expressed the endopolygalac-turonase and showed differential activity on plant tissue. No evidence for self-transfer of pPEC320 or the tagged derivative was observed. A 2.85-kb cloned fragment from pPEC320 containing the plasmid-borne pehA gene was sequenced and compared to the pehA gene from Erwinia carotovora subsp. carotovora and Ralstonia solanacearum and the polygalacturonase sequence from Lycopersicon esculentum.

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