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Genome-wide identification of bacterial plant colonization genes.

Authors :
Cole, Benjamin J
Dong, Xinnian1
Cole, Benjamin J
Feltcher, Meghan E
Waters, Robert J
Wetmore, Kelly M
Mucyn, Tatiana S
Ryan, Elizabeth M
Wang, Gaoyan
Ul-Hasan, Sabah
McDonald, Meredith
Yoshikuni, Yasuo
Malmstrom, Rex R
Deutschbauer, Adam M
Dangl, Jeffery L
Visel, Axel
Cole, Benjamin J
Dong, Xinnian1
Cole, Benjamin J
Feltcher, Meghan E
Waters, Robert J
Wetmore, Kelly M
Mucyn, Tatiana S
Ryan, Elizabeth M
Wang, Gaoyan
Ul-Hasan, Sabah
McDonald, Meredith
Yoshikuni, Yasuo
Malmstrom, Rex R
Deutschbauer, Adam M
Dangl, Jeffery L
Visel, Axel
Source :
PLoS biology; vol 15, iss 9, e2002860; 1544-9173
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Diverse soil-resident bacteria can contribute to plant growth and health, but the molecular mechanisms enabling them to effectively colonize their plant hosts remain poorly understood. We used randomly barcoded transposon mutagenesis sequencing (RB-TnSeq) in Pseudomonas simiae, a model root-colonizing bacterium, to establish a genome-wide map of bacterial genes required for colonization of the Arabidopsis thaliana root system. We identified 115 genes (2% of all P. simiae genes) with functions that are required for maximal competitive colonization of the root system. Among the genes we identified were some with obvious colonization-related roles in motility and carbon metabolism, as well as 44 other genes that had no or vague functional predictions. Independent validation assays of individual genes confirmed colonization functions for 20 of 22 (91%) cases tested. To further characterize genes identified by our screen, we compared the functional contributions of P. simiae genes to growth in 90 distinct in vitro conditions by RB-TnSeq, highlighting specific metabolic functions associated with root colonization genes. Our analysis of bacterial genes by sequence-driven saturation mutagenesis revealed a genome-wide map of the genetic determinants of plant root colonization and offers a starting point for targeted improvement of the colonization capabilities of plant-beneficial microbes.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PLoS biology; vol 15, iss 9, e2002860; 1544-9173
Notes :
application/pdf, PLoS biology vol 15, iss 9, e2002860 1544-9173
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367469678
Document Type :
Electronic Resource