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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
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ABSTRACT |
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.
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INTRODUCTION |
Many plant-associated bacteria have
the ability to produce the plant growth regulator indole-3-acetic acid
(IAA) (5, 9, 25, 33). IAA is involved in diseases caused by
gall- and knot-forming bacterial species (33); however, its
role in other bacteria remains undefined. It is unclear whether these
bacteria produce IAA during colonization of plant surfaces and whether
this metabolite is beneficial to the bacteria during their growth and
survival in the phyllosphere. The production of IAA may enable bacteria to detoxify tryptophan analogues present on plant surfaces
(15), to downregulate genes involved in plant defense
responses (33), or to inhibit the development of the
hypersensitive response by plants (26). We recently
demonstrated that the ipdC gene, which encodes the
indolepyruvate decarboxylase of Erwinia
herbicola (Pantoea agglomerans) 299R and which is
involved in the indolepyruvate pathway for IAA synthesis in this
epiphytic strain (2), is osmoresponsive and plant inducible
(3). We hypothesized that the secretion of IAA may modify
the microhabitat of epiphytic bacteria by increasing nutrient leakage
from plant cells; enhanced nutrient availability may better enable
IAA-producing bacteria to colonize the phyllosphere and may contribute
to their epiphytic fitness (1).
Few studies have attempted to determine the ecological significance of
IAA production in pathogenic bacteria. Varvaro and Martella
(31) showed that IAA-deficient mutants of Pseudomonas syringae pv. savastanoi, obtained by selection for resistance to
-methyltryptophan, were reduced in their ability to colonize and
survive on olive leaf surfaces. The survival of an
-methyltryptophan-resistant IAA-deficient mutant of P. syringae pv. savastanoi in knots also was affected, its population
declining more rapidly than that of the parental strain when inoculated
alone into oleander leaf tissue (28). The importance of IAA
production in bacterial colonization of bean leaves was also tested
with the brown spot pathogen P. syringae pv. syringae and an
IAA-deficient mutant derived by insertional mutagenesis
(21). Although no difference in the survival of the parental
and mutant strains on bean leaves was observed in the greenhouse, a
small difference in their behavior was apparent in experiments
conducted in a mist chamber (21). There have been no studies
of the role of IAA production in plant-associated bacteria that do not
cause disease.
IAA biosynthesis is not essential for bacterial growth and survival,
since IAA-deficient mutants grow as well as their IAA-producing parental strain in vitro (2, 29). Large differences in the epiphytic behaviors of IAA-producing bacteria and isogenic
IAA-deficient mutants consequently would not be expected. Even small
contributions of IAA production to epiphytic fitness could account
for the common presence of this phenotype in epiphytic bacteria
(19). Measurements of changes in the ratio of two
strains following coinoculation, a common approach in ecological
studies, can allow the detection of even small differences in the
competitive behaviors of two organisms. This approach can detect much
smaller differences in behavior between closely related species than
comparison of populations of these species when present singly in
separate habitats (16). In this study, we tested the role of
IAA in the epiphytic fitness of E. herbicola by comparing
the relative changes in the population sizes of the parental and
IAA-deficient mutant strains with time after their inoculation onto
plants in both controlled and field environments.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains.
The source and characteristics of
E. herbicola 299R were described previously (1).
E. herbicola 299XYLE is a derivative of strain 299R
containing the xylE gene from Pseudomonas putida mt-2 (13) inserted into ipdC. The xylE
gene encodes a 2,3-catechol dioxygenase catalyzing the conversion of
catechol to 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde, a yellow compound
(13). The xylE gene was inserted into
ipdC by partial digestion of pMB2 with KpnI and
ligation of xylE into the unique KpnI site of
ipdC (2). The xylE derivative of pMB2
(pMB2A) was mobilized into strain 299R by triparental mating with
helper plasmid pRK2013 (7). The ipdC gene of
strain 299R was interrupted by homologous recombination of the
xylE insertional derivative of ipdC into the
chromosome to generate strain 299XYLE. In strain 299XYLE,
xylE was fused to ipdC in the same
transcriptional orientation as ipdC. Strain 299XYLE could
therefore be distinguished from the parental strain by its ability to
convert catechol to a yellow compound. Quantification of IAA and
tryptophol (TOL) production in cultures of strains 299R and 299XYLE was
performed by high-performance liquid chromatography as described
previously (2).
Preparation of inoculum.
The inoculum for IAA bioassays was
prepared by growing strains to stationary phase in King's B medium at
27°C. The cells were then centrifuged, washed twice in potassium
phosphate buffer (10 mM, pH 7.0) (KP buffer), resuspended at
109 cells ml
1 in KP buffer, and used in
bioassays. For the greenhouse and field studies, bacterial strains were
cultured on Luria-Bertani agar supplemented with 100 µg of rifampin
ml
1 (LBAR) for 24 h at 27°C. Bacterial cells were
removed from the agar surface with a swab and suspended in KP buffer.
The cell concentrations of the suspensions were determined
turbidimetrically and adjusted by dilution in KP buffer. Appropriate
volumes of the suspensions of the parental and mutant strains were
combined to yield the following proportions of strain 299R to strain
299XYLE: 0:1, 1:0, 1:1, 1:10, and 10:1.
IAA root bioassay.
The IAA root bioassay was performed as
described by Loper and Schroth (20) with the following
modifications. Radish seeds (Raphanus sativus L. cv. Comet)
were washed by agitation in 100 ml of an aqueous solution containing
1% sodium hypochlorite and 100 µl of Tergitol for 10 min and then
rinsed five times in 100 ml of sterile water. Ten seeds were placed at
the top of each Seed-Pack Growth Pouch (Vaughan's Seed Company,
Downers Grove, Ill.). The packs were wetted with 10 ml of an aqueous
solution of an indole derivative or of a bacterial suspension in KP
buffer (109 cells ml
1); control treatments
consisted of wetting the packs with water or KP buffer, respectively.
Five replicate packs were prepared per treatment and incubated at room
temperature in the dark for 4 days. Root length was recorded, 2-cm-long
root tips (three from each pack) were crushed in 1.3 ml of KP buffer,
and bacterial population size was estimated by plating on LBAR with a
spiral diluter-plater (Spiral Systems, Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio).
Estimation of fitness in culture.
Cells of both strain 299R
and strain 299XYLE were cultured in minimal A medium (23) to
stationary phase at 27°C, centrifuged, and resuspended in KP buffer.
Appropriate volumes of the suspensions of the parental and mutant
strains were combined to yield an equal number of cells of each strain,
and a small aliquot of the mixed suspension was added to 10 ml of
minimal A medium or minimal A medium containing 1.28% NaCl to yield a
final total cell concentration of 5.5 × 105 cells
ml
1. Ten replicate cultures for each medium were prepared
and incubated at 27°C on a rotary shaker. Culture aliquots were taken
at mid-log phase and stationary phase of growth, and the cell
concentration of each strain was estimated by dilution plating on LBAR.
After 24 h of incubation, 10 µl of each culture was transferred
to a new flask; the same procedure was repeated twice. The population size of each strain was estimated by a colony lift assay as described below.
Greenhouse study.
Bacterial cells were applied to beans
(Phaseolus vulgaris cv. Bush Blue Lake 274) at the first
trifoliate leaf stage by immersing the plants (10 per pot) in a
suspension of bacterial cells for 5 s. The cell concentration of
the suspension was adjusted to 2 × 103 cells
ml
1 for each strain in single inoculations and in
coinoculations at a ratio of 1:1. For coinoculations at a ratio of 1:10
or 10:1, the suspensions consisted of a mixture of 2 × 103 and 2 × 104 cells ml
1
of the appropriate strains. For each treatment, plants from five replicate pots were inoculated. The individual pots were covered with
plastic bags to maintain a humid environment and were placed in a
randomized complete block design on a bench in a greenhouse at 25°C.
Two primary leaves were sampled randomly from each pot at regular time
intervals during the 40 h following inoculation.
Field study.
Field studies were conducted in a 5-year-old
pear (Pyrus communis var. Bartlett) orchard located at the
University of California Hopland Research and Extension Center in
northern California. The trees in the plot were arranged in a
randomized complete block design with four treatments and five
replications. Each replicate treatment consisted of two adjacent trees
in a row. One untreated guard tree separated each treatment area within
a row, and two trees separated each treated experimental area from the
adjacent trees in the orchard. The treatments consisted of an untreated control, strain 299R, and strain 299XYLE inoculated singly at 106 cells ml
1 or the strains coinoculated in
equal proportions (5 × 105 cells ml
1
for each strain).
The pear trees were inoculated at 90% bloom. To ensure that only
flowers that had recently opened at the time of inoculation would be
sampled, open flowers were tagged prior to inoculation by placing a
small plastic band around the spur supporting the flower cluster. All
unopened or mature flowers in a tagged cluster were removed before
inoculation. Bacterial suspensions were applied to the trees with a
manually pressurized hand-held sprayer under calm weather conditions at
sunrise. Individual pear flowers or immature fruits (at about 10 days
after inoculation, pear flowers had matured into young fruits) were
collected regularly for up to 47 days after inoculation. Twenty samples
(four per replicate) and 30 samples (six per replicate) were collected
from trees treated with single and dual inoculations, respectively.
Estimation of bacterial population sizes.
For the greenhouse
study, individual bean leaves were placed in large tubes containing 20 ml of KP buffer, sonicated for 7 min, and vortexed vigorously.
Appropriate dilutions of the suspension were plated on LBAR to estimate
cell numbers. Each leaf was weighed to allow the bacterial population
size to be normalized for the amount of leaf tissue.
Single pear flowers or fruits were placed in small individual plastic
bags and returned to the laboratory in a cooler. They
were then
suspended in KP buffer, sonicated for 7 min, and homogenized
by manual
agitation of the bags. The homogenates were plated on
LBAR to estimate
population sizes of strain 299R and/or 299XYLE
and on King's B agar to
estimate total bacterial population sizes.
To differentiate colonies of strains 299R and 299XYLE on LBAR plates,
colonies were lifted by pressing Whatman no. 2 filter
paper onto the
plates; the filters were then sprayed until moist
with a solution of
0.1 M catechol. After 5 min, colonies of strain
299XYLE had developed
an intense yellow color characteristic of
the degradation of catechol
and could be distinguished from those
of strain 299R. The filters were
dried, and the colonies of each
strain were enumerated.
Statistical methods.
All statistical calculations were
performed with SAS (version 6.04; SAS Institute Inc., Cary, N.C.).
 |
RESULTS |
Characterization of E. herbicola 299XYLE.
Strain
299XYLE produced only 0.62 ± 0.08 (mean ± standard error) µg
of IAA per ml when cultured for 48 h in minimal A medium supplemented with 0.02% tryptophan; TOL was undetectable. The IAA
content of 299XYLE cultures was 14-fold lower than that of 299R
cultures (data not shown). The xylE derivative of 299R
therefore showed reduced TOL and IAA synthesis in vitro similar to that of other ipdC insertional mutants of 299R that were
previously described, such as strain 299MX149 (2).
The
xylE gene was expressed efficiently in
E. herbicola, producing an intense yellow color in colony lifts even
when present
as a single copy on the chromosome. This gene also was
stably
maintained in strain 299XYLE, since no spontaneous loss of XylE
activity was noted upon serial culturing of this strain for up
to 20 cell generations. Additionally, the stability of
xylE was
tested on plants by spraying with catechol colony lifts from pear
flower samples inoculated individually with strain 299XYLE. No
indication of the loss of XylE activity during the course of the
field
experiment was found, since the presence of colonies without
a yellow
halo was not detected.
Effect of bacterial IAA production on roots.
The root bioassay
showed that IAA was the most potent inhibitor of growth among all
indole compounds tested, reducing root elongation at concentrations of
higher than 10
7 M (Fig. 1).
Indolepyruvate, indoleacetaldehyde, and tryptophan also were
inhibitory, although only at concentrations 100-fold higher than those
of IAA (Fig. 1). Strain 299R, which produces large quantities of IAA in
culture, caused a 64% inhibition of radish root elongation compared to
the control treatment (Fig. 2). This
inhibition of growth was equivalent to that obtained when roots were
exposed to IAA at a concentration of ca. 5 × 10
5 M
in the root bioassay (Fig. 1). In contrast, the average length of roots
grown in the presence of strain 299XYLE, the isogenic ipdC-negative mutant with a greatly reduced ability to
synthesize IAA, was not significantly different from that of roots
exposed to KP buffer only (Fig. 2). The mean population size of strain 299XYLE on roots was about twofold lower than that of the parental strain (Fig. 2). These results were similar to those obtained in
replicate experiments with strain 299XYLE as well as with strain 299MX149, another ipdC-negative mutant described earlier
(2).

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FIG. 1.
Effect of indole derivatives on the elongation of radish
roots. Roots were grown in growth packs wetted with tryptophan ( ),
indolepyruvate ( ), indoleacetaldehyde ( ), TOL ( ), or IAA ( )
solutions of increasing concentrations. Distilled water was used for
the control treatment (×). Each value is the mean for five replicate
packs containing 10 roots each; error bars indicate ±1 standard error
of the mean.
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FIG. 2.
Effect of E. herbicola 299R and 299XYLE on
the elongation of radish roots (solid bars) and their respective
populations (hatched bars) on 2-cm root tips, as measured in the root
bioassay for IAA. The control treatment (CTL) consisted of KP buffer.
Values marked by the same letter were not significantly different, as
determined by the Duncan's multiple-range test, at a P
value of 0.05.
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Estimation of population ratios in vitro.
Strain 299XYLE grew
at the same rate and achieved the same cell concentration as strain
299R in minimal A medium with or without 0.02%
L-tryptophan (data not shown). Moreover, the mean ratio of
the number of cells of strain 299R to that of strain 299XYLE was
approximately 1.0 throughout 23 generations of growth in minimal A
medium (3 days) after inoculation with equal proportions of the two
strains (Fig. 3). Similarly, the ratio of
these two strains did not change significantly during growth in minimal
A medium containing 1.28% NaCl (Fig. 3), a culture condition under
which cells experience low osmotic pressure and under which the
transcriptional activity of ipdC is increased 32-fold
(3).

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FIG. 3.
Cell density dynamics of E. herbicola 299R
and 299XYLE in a competition experiment in which both were coinoculated
in a ratio of 1:1 in minimal A medium ( ) and minimal A medium
containing 1.28% NaCl ( ). Values represent the mean of the ratio of
the cell concentration of strain 299R to that of strain 299XYLE, and
error bars represent the standard error of the mean.
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Population dynamics of E. herbicola 299R and 299XYLE on
beans in the greenhouse.
Strain 299XYLE grew at approximately the
same rate as strain 299R and achieved population sizes on bean leaves
similar to those of strain 299R when inoculated alone (Fig.
4). However, the rate of growth of
299XYLE was slightly lower than that of the parental strain when both
were present on the same leaves. This difference in growth rate was
apparent as an increase in the ratio of the population size of 299R to
that of the mutant in the 10 to 18 h immediately following
inoculation (Fig. 5). The ratios of 299R
to 299XYLE increased as much as 1.8-, 1.7-, and 2-fold when these
strains were applied to the plants in proportions of 1:1, 1:10, and
10:1, respectively. Regression analysis of the ratio against the time
during which an increase in the ratio was observed showed a significant
linear relationship for all three experiments (P < 0.01). A two-tailed t test performed on the slope of these
regressions also provided evidence that the increase in the ratio of
the population size of strain 299R to that of strain 299XYLE over time
was significant (tslope, 3.17, 2.82, and 3.35 for inoculation ratios of 1:1, 1:10, and 10:1, respectively; P < 0.01 for all three experiments). However, the
relative population sizes of the strains were not maintained after cell
growth had slowed (ca. 15 to 18 h after inoculation), and the
ratio of 299R to 299XYLE decreased about 50% once the strains had
established maximum population sizes on the leaves. Similar trends in
ratios were observed in replicate experiments in the greenhouse; the parental strain consistently reached significantly higher population sizes than 299XYLE.

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FIG. 4.
Population dynamics of E. herbicola 299R
( ) and the isogenic IAA-deficient xylE insertional
mutant, 299XYLE ( ), after inoculation of each strain individually
onto bean plants in a greenhouse experiment. The error bars represent
±1 standard error of the mean of the log-transformed bacterial
population sizes.
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FIG. 5.
Change in the ratio of the population of E. herbicola 299R to that of E. herbicola 299XYLE over
time after the strains were coinoculated in proportions of 1:1 (A),
1:10 (B), and 10:1 (C) onto bean plants in a greenhouse experiment.
Values represent the mean of the ratios of the arithmetic population
sizes of the two strains, determined from individual leaves. Error bars
represent ±1 standard error of the mean.
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Population dynamics of E. herbicola 299R and 299XYLE on
pear flowers in the field.
The population size of the mutant
strain deficient in IAA production was similar to that of parental
strain 299R at a given time after both were applied to pear flowers
alone, although the mean population sizes of the IAA-deficient mutant
were generally smaller than those of parental strain 299R throughout
the sampling period during an experiment in 1994 (Fig.
6). It is noteworthy that strain 299R
attained and generally maintained slightly larger populations despite
an initial cell density on the flowers lower than that of strain
299XYLE (Fig. 6). A similar trend was observed after the strains were
coinoculated in a proportion of 1:1. It should be noted that the log
value of the ratio of the parental strain population size to that of
the IAA-deficient mutant increased from
0.2 1 day after inoculation
to greater than 0 throughout most of the sampling period (Fig.
7) (because of the high variability in
the value of the individual ratios at any given sampling time in the
field experiments, the ratio of the population size of strain 299R to
that of strain 299XYLE was log transformed to achieve a normal
distribution of the data). Qualitatively similar results were obtained
in repeat experiments conducted in the spring of 1995 and the spring of
1996 (data not shown). Regression analysis of the log-transformed ratio
of IAA-producing and non-IAA-producing strains from all of the
individual field samples against time showed a relationship between
ratio and time (P = 0.06) (Fig. 8). The low R2
value reflected the high variability of the population ratios observed
on individual flowers within a few days after inoculation. Although the
population sizes of both strains were initially very similar after
coinoculation onto pear flowers, the proportions of the two strains in
individual flowers varied greatly, even within a given treatment, after
about 4 days (Fig. 7 and 8). This same phenomenon was observed in
repeat experiments conducted in 1995 and 1996 (data not shown).
Regression analysis also revealed that the parental strain comprised a
generally higher proportion of the recoverable population than the
IAA-deficient mutant over the sampling period
(tslope = 1.87; P < 0.05) (Fig.
8).

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FIG. 6.
Population dynamics of E. herbicola 299R
( ) and the isogenic IAA-deficient mutant, 299XYLE ( ), after
inoculation of each strain individually onto pear flowers in the field
in 1994. Error bars represent ±1 standard error of the mean of the
log-transformed bacterial population sizes. Samples collected before
approximately 9 days after inoculation consisted of immature or mature
pear flowers and thereafter consisted of immature fruits.
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FIG. 7.
Population dynamics of E. herbicola 299R
( ) and 299XYLE ( ) and change in the ratio ( ) of their
respective populations after coinoculation in a proportion of 1:1 onto
pear flowers in the field in 1994. Values represent the mean of the
log-transformed population sizes of 299R and 299XYLE and the mean of
the log-transformed ratio of the untransformed population sizes of
these strains on individual flowers. Error bars represent ±1 standard
error of the mean. For ratio data, only the standard error of the mean
below the mean is shown for clarity. Numbers in parentheses on the
right-hand y axis represent the antilog of the
log-transformed ratio of population sizes, for easier interpretation of
the data.
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FIG. 8.
Regression against time of the log-transformed ratios of
the arithmetic population sizes of E. herbicola 299R and
299XYLE from individual pear flowers or young fruits after inoculation
of the flowers with a 1:1 mixture of these strains for the entire
sampling season in 1994. The line drawn represents the linear
regression y = 0.006x + 0.03 (P = 0.06, R2 = 0.01).
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Similar, and temporally distinct, changes in ratios were related to
changes in the total population sizes of the parental
and IAA-deficient
mutant strains on pear flowers (or later on
immature fruits). Indeed,
in 1994 the mean of the log-transformed
ratios of 299R to 299XYLE
increased during periods of active growth
of the strains during the
first 12 days and again at 23 days following
inoculation (Fig.
7). A
decrease in the mean of the ratios between
13 and 23 days after
inoculation coincided with a general decline
in the total population
sizes of the two strains. A detailed analysis
of the change in the
proportions of the two strains in relation
to the change in the
population sizes was performed on data collected
from field experiments
carried out in the spring of 1994, 1995,
and 1996. In each year,
starting 2 days after inoculation, when
populations had undergone a
rapid increase to relatively large
and more constant sizes, time
intervals during which the combined
population size of 299R and 299XYLE
generally either increased
or decreased with time were identified. For
each of these time
intervals, the rates of change in the ratio of 299R
to 299XYLE
and in the combined population size were calculated from
regression
analyses of the mean of the log-transformed ratios of these
two
strains against time and from regression analyses of the mean
of
the log-transformed combined population size of strain 299R
and 299XYLE
against time. The resulting data were used to regress
the rate of
change in the ratio of the two strains against the
rate of change in
the population size for all three field seasons.
The regression
analysis revealed a significant relationship (
P = 0.003,
R2 = 0.85) between these two parameters
(Fig.
9). It is also noteworthy
that
little change in the proportions of the IAA-producing and
IAA-deficient
strains occurred when no net change in population
size was measured
(Fig.
9).

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FIG. 9.
Regression of the change in the ratio of the population
size of E. herbicola 299R to that of E. herbicola
299XYLE against the change in the combined population sizes of these
two strains when coinoculated onto pear flowers for three consecutive
field seasons. Each axis represents the slope calculated from the
regression of the mean of the log-transformed population ratio
(ordinate) and the mean of the log-transformed population size
(abscissa) against time for individual periods when the combined
populations of the two strains were either generally increasing or
generally decreasing. Numbers in parentheses on the ordinate represent
the antilog of the rate of change in the mean of the log-transformed
ratio per day, for easier interpretation of the data. The line drawn
represents the linear regression y = 0.3x 0.0008 (P = 0.003, R2 = 0.85).
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DISCUSSION |
The occurrence of IAA production in tryptophan-supplemented
cultures of E. herbicola strains and many other
nonpathogenic plant-associated bacteria is common (19).
Increased transcriptional activity of ipdC during the growth
of E. herbicola 299R on plant surfaces provides some
evidence for the bacterial production of IAA in the phyllosphere
(3). In this study, we found more direct evidence for the
production of IAA on plants by E. herbicola by using a root
bioassay for IAA. Because roots are very sensitive to IAA, their
elongation is inhibited by relatively low concentrations of exogenous
IAA (27). A linear relationship correlating the inhibition
of root elongation with the amount of IAA produced by rhizobacteria in
cultures was observed previously (20). The differential
effects on root elongation of strains 299R and 299XYLE showed that the
factor responsible for the inhibition of root growth by strain 299R was
the exogenous production of IAA, since these isogenic strains differed
only in their ability to synthesize IAA. The observation that the
population size of strain 299XYLE on roots was twofold lower than that
of strain 299R cannot account solely for its lesser effect on root
growth, since a resultant twofold reduction in IAA production from
wild-type levels should have resulted in only a negligible reduction in
root inhibition by the IAA-deficient mutant (Fig. 1). The root bioassay
thus provides further evidence that strain 299R produces IAA on plant
surfaces and not solely in culture. This bioassay should be a good
surrogate for epiphytic growth, since the chemical environment of roots is probably similar to that of leaves and since many epiphytes (such as
strain 299R) grow well in the rhizosphere. These results thus indicate
that bacterial IAA synthesis can affect the normal physiology of plant
cells. The differential effects of the two strains on root growth also
indicate the importance of the ipdC gene in the production
of IAA by strain 299R on plants.
The use of coinoculations and estimation of ratios of the populations
of coinoculated strains over time allowed the differences in behaviors
between isogenic IAA-producing and IAA-deficient bacterial strains on
bean plants and pear flowers to be more unambiguously determined than
comparisons of the population size of each strain inoculated singly, as
has been done in most studies (21, 28, 31). This method
provided greater statistical power in population studies performed
under natural conditions, in which a changing environment is usually an
important source of variation in population sizes, since the estimation
of the ratio of two strains sharing a common environment inherently
contains an internal control (16). That is, large
leaf-to-leaf variations caused by sampling and environmental variations
do not overshadow differences in the population sizes of individual
strains since, by sharing the same leaf, the two strains exhibit
similar leaf-dependent population sizes.
The xylE gene enabled us to monitor each strain in mixed
populations on the same isolation plate and thus to accurately compute population ratios. The nearly constant ratio of strain 299R to strain
299XYLE in mixed cultures over 23 generations, even under conditions
inducing higher levels of ipdC transcription and therefore of xylE expression, indicated that XylE activity
affected neither the ability of strain 299XYLE to grow in cultures, nor
its plating efficiency. Wilson and Lindow (32) showed in de
Wit replacement experiments that the introduction and expression of
xylE within the iceC gene in the P. syringae Cit7 genome, shown not to contribute to epiphytic fitness
(18), did not reduce the ability of this bacterial epiphyte
to colonize the phyllosphere. On the basis of these observations, it
was not expected that the presence of xylE per se would
affect the ability of E. herbicola to grow and survive on
plant surfaces. Moreover, although pleiotropic effects from insertional
mutagenesis of ipdC cannot be ruled out, the ipdC
gene is well characterized and the function of its product is very
specific (2, 14); pleiotropic effects from its inactivation are therefore unlikely. Additionally, derivatives of strain 299R that
contained an insertional mutation in the region within about 1,000 nucleotides downstream of ipdC grew as well as the wild type
in minimal A medium (data not shown). Thus, there is little evidence to
suggest that the lower growth rate of strain 299XYLE is due to a polar
effect from insertional mutagenesis of ipdC.
The greenhouse studies on the comparative behaviors of the parental
strain and its IAA-deficient derivative clearly demonstrated a
difference in the extent of growth of these two strains when coinoculated onto bean leaves. Independent of the initial ratio of the
two strains, the population of the parental strain increased to
approximately twice that of the mutant strain during the period of
active growth and colonization of bean leaves. This change in ratio,
when normalized per number of cell generations that occurred during
growth on beans, represented a selection rate constant (16,
17) of 0.067 per cell generation. Using a similar approach of
studying changes in the ratio of two competing bacterial populations,
Lenski et al. (17) demonstrated the decreased competitive fitness of plasmid-bearing Escherichia coli cells compared
to plasmid-free cells and reported a selection rate constant of 0.025 per cell generation. Thus, because of the statistical power of the
computation of ratios from mixed populations, the twofold increase in
the ratio observed in our greenhouse studies represents a significant
enhancement in the competitive fitness of strain 299R, due to its
ability to produce IAA, particularly when considered over evolutionary
time frames. This change in the proportion of IAA-producing to
IAA-deficient strains in mixed populations on leaves appears also to
reflect a plant-specific benefit of IAA production, since no difference
in the growth of these two strains was noted in culture. This benefit
may be mediated by the increased leakage of nutrients from plant cells
in the vicinity of IAA-producing bacteria colonizing the plant surface.
IAA affects plants at very low concentrations and promotes cell wall
loosening during cell elongation (30). Exogenously applied
auxin can stimulate the release of large quantities of monosaccharides
and oligosaccharides from the plant cell wall (11, 12). As
we previously hypothesized (1), a similar release of
nutrients from plant cells in response to IAA produced by epiphytic
bacteria on plants may confer upon them a selective advantage.
The observation that the growth rate of wild-type strain 299R was
consistently higher than that of the IAA-deficient mutant on leaves is
noteworthy (Fig. 5). Considerable circumstantial evidence suggests that
the nutrient concentration on leaves is low. Chet et al. (4)
and Fokkema and Lorbeer (10) reported that the
concentrations of glucose and other sugars on wetted leaves were in the
range of 3 to 20 mg/liter. Our measurements of sugar concentrations on
bean leaves grown under the conditions used here also were about 10 µg per leaf, resulting in about 10 mg/liter if the leaf were fully
wetted (22). The growth rate for strain 299R on leaves (0.61 generation/h) (Fig. 4) was only about half that in minimal A medium at
the same temperature. Monod as cited by Dabes et al. (6) has
shown that the growth rate of the enteric bacterium E. coli,
which is closely related to E. herbicola, is strongly
dependent on nutrient concentration up to concentrations of about 50 mg/liter; half-maximal growth occurs at a nutrient concentration of
about 10 mg/liter. We speculate that the relatively low growth rate of
strain 299R and other epiphytes on plants may be due to the low
concentration of nutrients found in this habitat. Indeed, measurements
of the amount of nutrients leached from plant foliage (4,
22) are consistent with this conjecture. If we assume, based on
this circumstantial evidence, that bacterial cells on leaves experience
low nutrient concentrations, then we would expect from the work of
Monod, as cited by Dabes et al. (6), that the growth rate on
leaves would vary nearly directly with the nutrient concentration. The
generation time for strain 299R was observed to be only 0.93 that of
the IAA-deficient mutant on bean plants (Fig. 5). This finding suggests
that the nutrient concentration in the vicinity of the parental strain was about 7% higher than that near the mutant strain. If the nutrient concentrations on leaves were as low as 10 mg/liter, as we suggested above, only about an additional 1 mg of nutrients per liter would need
to be made available to the IAA-producing strain to achieve the higher
growth rate reported in our study.
The similar increase in the ratio observed when the initial proportion
of strain 299R was 10-fold larger than that of 299XYLE, compared to
when it was present in an equal or smaller proportion, indicates that
the parental strain did not contribute to the epiphytic fitness of the
mutant strain under the tested conditions. The failure of the parental
strain to complement the mutant strain on plant surfaces suggests that
the release of bacterial IAA has a very localized effect on the leaf
environment and that its benefit may be limited to the bacterial cells
that produce IAA.
Very similar growth-dependent changes in the ratio of the IAA-producing
strain to the IAA-deficient strain were observed in greenhouse studies
of bean leaves as well as in several field studies of pear flowers. Two
distinct trends in the ratio of the population sizes of the two strains
were detected in both studies: (i) a general increase in the proportion
of the IAA-producing strain coincident with an increase in the combined
populations of the two strains and (ii) a general decline in the
proportion of the IAA-producing strain when total population sizes
decreased. The first trend indicates that the production of IAA
conferred a selective advantage to the parental strain during periods
of active colonization of the phyllosphere. It is noteworthy that the
induction of ipdC occurs during the active phase of growth of strain 299R on plants (3), indicating that IAA is
produced during this period. This finding supports our conjecture that IAA synthesis contributes to the growth of strain 299R on plant surfaces. Although the production of IAA conferred some advantage to
E. herbicola in the colonization of the phyllosphere, it was not beneficial for survival in this habitat, since the increased ratio
of the population of strain 299R to that of strain 299XYLE was not
maintained upon the cessation of growth on bean leaves and pear
flowers. It is likely that the increased population size of parental
strain 299R attained in the presence of the production of IAA during
multiplication in the phyllosphere would not have been sustained if,
for example, IAA-induced nutrient leakage decreased due to a cessation
of bacterial IAA production and substrate availability subsequently
became low. In this situation, the ratio of the IAA-producing strain to
the IAA-deficient strain would have declined. These two trends in
population size and ratio changes were detected consistently not only
in our greenhouse studies but also in experiments with pear flowers
during three consecutive field seasons. Indeed, the correlation between
the dynamics of bacterial population sizes and the dynamics of
population ratios that was demonstrated by regression analysis of the
combined data from all three field studies was quite strong. This
result clearly indicates that a benefit of IAA production occurs
primarily when cells can exploit resources in the phyllosphere for
further growth.
The results from the greenhouse and field studies revealed that the
relative abundance of strain 299R increased about twofold compared to
that of strain 299XYLE over a period of time when net population size
changes indicated that at least 9 cell generations had occurred.
Although IAA production did not confer upon strain 299R large
qualitative differences in its ability to exploit plant surfaces
compared to that of the isogenic IAA-deficient mutant strain, the
apparent benefit to epiphytic fitness conferred by IAA biosynthesis
is large when considered over evolutionary time periods. The overall
fitness of a bacterial strain is most likely contributed by many
individual traits, and large differences in the fitness of nearly
isogenic strains are unlikely. Indeed, many studies of microbial
evolution have shown only small differences in the ratio of two nearly
isogenic strains grown together in the same environment over thousands
of cell generations; these small differences are nonetheless considered
very significant in terms of their impact on bacterial competitive
fitness (8, 24). Thus, the common occurrence of IAA
production among strains of E. herbicola may be explained by
the fitness benefits that it confers during the extensive epiphytic
life of this bacterium. These benefits may be related to plant-mediated
changes in resource availability to E. herbicola on plant
surfaces.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We are thankful to Tom Cheung, Ahgee Guo, and Lai-Mun Gong for
valuable technical assistance with the collection and processing of
field samples.
This study was supported in part by grant I-1260-87 from the
U.S.-Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund and
by grant 92-37303-7751 from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Competitive Grants Program.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
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.
 |
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