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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 1998, p. 3256-3263, Vol. 64, No. 9
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Contribution of Indole-3-Acetic Acid Production to
the Epiphytic Fitness of Erwinia herbicola
M. T.
Brandl and
S. E.
Lindow*
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology,
University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
Received 4 December 1997/Accepted 29 June 1998
Erwinia herbicola 299R produces large quantities of
indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) in culture media supplemented with
L-tryptophan. To assess the contribution of IAA production
to epiphytic fitness, the population dynamics of the wild-type strain
and an IAA-deficient mutant of this strain on leaves were studied.
Strain 299XYLE, an isogenic IAA-deficient mutant of strain 299R, was
constructed by insertional interruption of the indolepyruvate
decarboxylase gene of strain 299R with the xylE gene, which
encodes a 2,3-catechol dioxygenase from Pseudomonas putida
mt-2. The xylE gene provided a useful marker for monitoring
populations of the IAA-deficient mutant strain in mixed populations
with the parental strain in ecological studies. A root bioassay for
IAA, in which strain 299XYLE inhibited significantly less root
elongation than strain 299R, provided evidence that E. herbicola produces IAA on plant surfaces in amounts sufficient to
affect the physiology of its host and that IAA production in strain
299R is not solely an in vitro phenomenon. The epiphytic fitness of
strains 299R and 299XYLE was evaluated in greenhouse and field studies
by analysis of changes in the ratio of the population sizes of these
two strains after inoculation as mixtures onto plants. Populations of
the parental strain increased to approximately twice those of the
IAA-deficient mutant strain after coinoculation in a proportion of 1:1
onto bean plants in the greenhouse and onto pear flowers in field
studies. In all experiments, the ratio of the population sizes of
strain 299R and 299XYLE increased during periods of active growth on
plant tissue but not when population sizes were not increasing with time.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Plant and Microbial Biology, 111 Koshland Hall, University of
California, Berkeley, CA 94720. Phone: (510) 642-4174. Fax: (510)
643-5098. E-mail: icelab{at}socrates.berkeley.edu.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 1998, p. 3256-3263, Vol. 64, No. 9
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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