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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2003, p. 679-682, Vol. 69, No. 1
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.1.679-682.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Molecular Characterization of Natural Erwinia pyrifoliae Strains Deficient in Hypersensitive Response
Susanne Jock,1 Won-Sik Kim,1 Marie-Anne Barny,2 and Klaus Geider1*
Max-Planck-Institut für Zellbiologie, Rosenhof, 68526 Ladenburg, Germany,1
Laboratoire de Pathologie Végétale, UMR217 INRA/INA-PG/Université Paris VI, 75231 Paris Cedex 05, France2
Received 3 June 2002/
Accepted 6 October 2002

ABSTRACT
From necrotic tissue of a Nashi pear tree, 24
Erwinia pyrifoliae strains, found to be identical by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis
analysis, were isolated. Thirteen strains were not virulent
on immature pears and did not induce a hypersensitive response
in tobacco leaves. The defective gene
hrpL was complemented
with intact genes from
E. pyrifoliae and
Erwinia amylovora.

INTRODUCTION
A bacterial disease similar to fire blight was observed on Nashi
pear trees (
Pyrus pyrifolia) in South Korea, caused by the novel
species
Erwinia pyrifoliae (
16). The pathogen was consistently
isolated from orchards in the area of Chuncheon from 1995 to
1998 and identified on semiselective agar plates and by PCR
(
15,
16).
E. pyrifoliae is restricted mainly to pear and is
highly related to pear-pathogenic
Erwinia strains from Japan
(
14). It can be distinguished from the fire blight pathogen
Erwinia amylovora by several microbiological and molecular features
(
13). Fire blight was first described for North America and
has spread to New Zealand, Europe, and the Mediterranean region
(
6,
10). The disease has not been reported in countries of the
Southern hemisphere other than New Zealand, except for a transient
occurrence in 1997 in Australia (
11). The pathogenicity of
E. amylovora depends on both the synthesis of the acidic exopolysaccharide
(EPS) amylovoran (
2,
17) and a functional type III secretion
system, involved in induction of a hypersensitive response (HR)
(
1,
5,
9,
17). The pear pathogen
E. pyrifoliae shares substantial
homologies to
ams genes and also requires capsular EPS for pathogenicity
(
12).

Natural HR-deficient strains.
In 1997, necrotic tissue from a Nashi pear tree was obtained
from Korea and extracted for isolation of the causative pathogen.
White colonies on Luria-Bertani (LB) agar (with 50 µg
of cycloheximide/ml to avoid fungal growth) were assayed for
the mucoid, yellowish colony morphology typical of
E. pyrifoliae on MM2Cu agar as described before (
13,
15,
16). The isolates
were further assayed on LB plates with 5% sucrose and on MM1Cu
agar as described for identification of
E. amylovora (
3). A
lack of levan synthesis and no growth on MM1Cu agar were additional
properties expected from
E. pyrifoliae. The synthesis of capsular
polysaccharide of the isolates on MM2Cu agar excluded being
deficient in a gene associated with EPS synthesis. The 24 isolates
were confirmed to be
E. pyrifoliae by PCR analysis (
4) with
primers derived from the rRNA genes and the
cps region (
15).
The strains were then assayed on pear slices for formation of
an exudate (ooze) to assess their virulence and infiltrated
into tobacco leaves in order to determine their capacity to
elicit an HR (Fig.
1, leaf sections 1 and 2). Fewer than one-half
of these isolates produced exudate on pear slices and the typical
necrotic symptoms at the infiltrations sites on tobacco leaves
(Table
1). The ability to cause HR is a requirement for virulence
of
E. amylovora strains (
1,
17). Harpin, encoded by
hrpN, is
transported to the surface of the bacteria and elicits HR in
the plant tissue (
20). The
dsp locus, adjacent to the
hrp gene
cluster, encodes Avr-like proteins (
5,
9) and is required for
pathogenicity but does not affect HR. A deficiency of
dsp-related
genes of
E. pyrifoliae was therefore not assumed for the nonpathogenic
isolates.

Identity of PFGE patterns.
To confirm genomic similarity between the pathogenic, HR-positive
strain Ep4/97 and the nonpathogenic, HR-negative strain Ep2/97,
we applied pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analysis
after digestion with restriction enzymes
XbaI and
SpeI. PFGE
analysis of
E. pyrifoliae strains can be used as a stringent
method for identification of the pathogen.
E. amylovora strains
isolated at different times in various European and Mediterranean
regions were closely related in their PFGE patterns after digestion
with
XbaI and
SpeI, and a common origin for these strains was
assumed (
10,
21). For both
E. pyrifoliae strains, the
XbaI fragments
obtained were identical, matching strains Ep8/95, Ep1/96, and
Ep16/96 isolated in 1995 and 1996 in South Korea, but the DNA
fragments were different for strain SLR21 (Fig.
2). This strain
was isolated from necrotic Nashi pear tissue in 1996 and also
differed from
E. pyrifoliae by other molecular and microbiological
properties (Table
1). Although the
SpeI fragments of
E. pyrifoliae strains have been more diverse than
XbaI patterns (
15), the
digests of genomic DNA from strains Ep2/97 and Ep4/97 with
SpeI
also produced identical patterns in PFGE analysis (data not
shown). Matching of the PFGE patterns supported the assumption
that the HR-deficient mutant Ep2/97 was derived from Ep4/97
during development of the disease in the affected Nashi pear
tree and excluded isolation of strains with microbiological
and molecular properties that were merely similar to those of
E. pyrifoliae. This coexistence of virulent and nonvirulent
strains in the population is a rare example of a possible advantage
for a nonpathogenic variant of a bacterial pathogen. The spontaneous
hrp mutants seem to be well suited to support the HR-positive
parent strain during colonization by the pathogen and may also
enhance pathogen survival in necrotic plant tissue.

Complementation.
The properties of the 13 isolated defective
E. pyrifoliae strains
showed a correlation of virulence on pears and HR on tobacco
(Table
1). An EPS-deficient mutant of
E. pyrifoliae had previously
been complemented with
ams genes of
E. amylovora (
12). In a
similar approach, we attempted to complement the HR-deficient
strain Ep2/97 with
hrp genes of
E. amylovora. Spontaneous mutants
with streptomycin resistance were selected, and strain Ep2/97Sm
was conjugated with
Escherichia coli strain S17-1 carrying cosmids
pPV130, pPV132, or pPV133 (
1). The cosmids contain partially
overlapping regions of the
hrp cluster (Fig.
3). Ep2/97Sm(pPV130)
and Ep2/97Sm(pPV133) gave a positive HR after incubation in
inducing medium (
7). To narrow down the area responsible for
complementation, several smaller plasmids (
9) covering DNA insertions
of the positive fragment were introduced by electroporation:
pMAB5, -31, -32, -38, -40, and -71 (Fig.
3). Only Ep2/97(pMAB71)
induced a positive HR, indicating that the mutation affected
either
hrpL or
hrpJ. To confirm the ability of pMAB71 for complementation
of HR-deficient variants, this plasmid was also introduced into
strains Ep41/97, Ep46/97, Ep49/97, Ep52/97, and Ep57/97 (Table
1), where HR was restored in each case. To dissect the involvement
of
hrpL or
hrpJ, primers were designed from the nucleotide sequences
of the
E. amylovora genes (EMBL nucleotide sequence database
accession numbers
U36244 and
L25828) as follows: for amplification
of
hrpL, HRPL1 (5'-GGCACAAGCCTTGCTAA) and HRPL2c (5'-CGGCAAGACAGGACACT),
and for amplification of
hrpJ, HRPJ1 (5'-TATGTCGCTGGCGACTT)
and HRPJ2c (5'-CTGATGGCGAGGCGATT). In the case of the
hrpJ primers,
only PCR fragments from CFBP1430 and Ea321 could be cloned into
pGEM-T (Promega). A faint PCR band but no cloning product was
obtained with
E. pyrifoliae strains as a template. Ep2/97 was
not complemented with
E. amylovora hrpJ clones, although a putative
promoter region was part of the amplified DNA. In PCR amplifications
of
hrpL, the
E. amylovora strains CFBP1430, Ea321, and Ea1/79
as well as the
E. pyrifoliae strains Ep1/96, Ep16/96, Ep2/97,
and Ep4/97 produced DNA fragments which were cloned into plasmid
pGEM-T. The resulting plasmids were assayed with restriction
enzyme
PstI for insertion of the gene in the direction of the
lac promoter (pGEM-hrpL). Strain Ep2/97 was successfully complemented
for HR on tobacco with pGEM-hrpL carrying inserts from the HR-positive
E. pyrifoliae strains Ep4/97 (Fig.
1, leaf section 3), Ep1/96,
and Ep16/96 and also from
E. amylovora strains CFBP1430, Ea321,
and Ea1/79. With the cloned
hrpL fragment from the nonpathogenic
strain Ep2/97 in pGEM-T, HR on tobacco leaves and virulence
on pear tissue were not restored for Ep2/97, confirming the
nonfunctional gene in this strain. On the other hand, Ep2/97
with pGEM-hrpL of virulent
E. amylovora and
E. pyrifoliae strains
caused necrotic symptoms on pear seedlings, which were slightly
retarded compared to those of the wild-type strain Ep4/97, possibly
due to the instability of the complementing plasmid. Attempts
to find spontaneous HR-negative mutants by passaging Ep4/97
on nutrient agar plates or by reisolation of cells from slime
formed on pear slices were not successful. Mutation to HR deficiency
is therefore not frequent for
E. pyrifoliae wild-type strains.

Change of single base pair.
The insertions obtained from strains Ep2/97 and Ep4/97 were
sequenced with labeled SP6 and T7 primers in both strands by
using an ALF sequencer, and the nucleotide sequences were independently
confirmed by commercial sequencing. A comparison of the nucleotide
sequences of the HR-positive and the HR-negative strains revealed
a change of nucleotide C into T at position 277 (Fig.
4), converting
the codon TCA (for serine) into TTA (for leucine), thereby changing
a polar amino acid into an unpolar amino acid. In the amino
acid sequences of HrpL of
E. amylovora (SWISS-PROT accession
number
Q46616) and of
Pseudomonas syringae (
P37929), this amino
acid is also serine, which may be needed for the function of
the protein. The amino acid sequences for HrpL of
E. pyrifoliae and
E. amylovora were 95% identical to each other and differed
at eight positions, which were located mainly at both ends of
the protein (Fig.
5). The nucleotide sequence of
hrpL from Ep16/96
corresponded with the nucleotide sequence from Ep4/97 with C
at position 277. To reconfirm the
hrpL sequences, DNA from strains
Ep2/97, Ep4/97, and Ep16/96 was also amplified with a proofreading
DNA polymerase (Accu
Taq; Sigma). The same sequence as in Fig.
4 was obtained for the three wild-type strains, and the change
from C to T at position 277 for strain Ep2/97 was observed.

Growth properties.
HrpL of
E. amylovora has been associated with the function of
a

-factor, controlling expression of the
hrp gene cluster (
19).
The mutation in the investigated population of
E. pyrifoliae from the necrotic tissue of Nashi pears can be explained by
a spontaneous base change. The mutants lacking recognition by
plant defense mechanisms could derive an advantage in some stages
of the pathogen's life cycle. We coinoculated the HR-deficient
strain Ep2/97Sm and wild-type Ep4/97 mixed at different ratios
(10:1, 1:1, and 1:10) into slices of immature pears. In most
cases, approximately equal amounts of cells from each strain
were recovered in the exudate developed after 1 week. These
data indicate a helper function of the HR-positive strain for
efficient multiplication of the HR-negative variant in host
plant tissue. After inoculation of
E. amylovora hrp mutants,
which had been complemented with cosmids carrying parts of the
hrp cluster, a large proportion of the recovered cells had lost
the cosmid, indicating feeding by the other bacteria (
1), similar
to in vivo complementation between
E. amylovora ams and
dsp mutants (
2). Although Ep2/97 was not virulent due to its inability
to damage plant cells, the wild-type strain relieved the restriction,
allowing both strains to grow. In the presence of wild-type
cells, a spontaneous HR-deficient variant may be advantageous
in pear tissue, because it does not challenge the plant defense
mechanism (
18). In addition, the variant could also have a better
chance than the HR-positive parent strain for survival during
decline of the population in a late stage of plant colonization.

Nucleotide sequence accession number.
The nucleotide sequence of
hrpL of
E. pyrifoliae strain Ep4/97
has been deposited in the EMBL nucleotide sequence database
with the accession number
AJ438881.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Max-Planck-Institut für Zellbiologie, Rosenhof, D-68526 Ladenburg, Germany. Phone: 49-6203-106-117. Fax: 49-6203-106-122. E-mail:
kgeider{at}zellbio.mpg.de.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2003, p. 679-682, Vol. 69, No. 1
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.1.679-682.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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