TY - JOUR
T1 - Analysis of the Binding of Expansin Exl1, from Pectobacterium carotovorum, to Plant Xylem and Comparison to EXLX1 from Bacillus subtilis
AU - Tovar-Herrera, Omar E.
AU - Rodríguez, Mabel
AU - Olarte-Lozano, Miguel
AU - Sampedro-Guerrero, Jimmy Andrés
AU - Guerrero, Adán
AU - Pinto-Cámara, Raúl
AU - Alvarado-Affantranger, Xóchitl
AU - Wood, Christopher D.
AU - Moran-Mirabal, Jose M.
AU - Pastor, Nina
AU - Segovia, Lorenzo
AU - Martínez-Anaya, Claudia
N1 - Funding Information:
This work received financial support from grants CONACYT Ciencia Baś ica (166050, 252551, and 252213) and DGAPA-PAPIIT (IN211116 and IA202417). M.R. and O.E.T.H. received a postdoctoral fellowships CONACYT grants. R.P.-C. thanks CONACYT Ciencia Baś ica (252213) for financial support. We are grateful to Arturo Pimentel, Fernando Gonzaĺ ez, Alfonso Miranda, and Blanca Ramos-Cerrillo for technical assistance and to J. Dubrowsky and A. Covarrubias for assistance with plant anatomy. Microscopy equipment was provided through CONACYT grants 123007, 232708, 260541, and 280487.
Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright 2018 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/6/30
Y1 - 2018/6/30
N2 - The plant xylem is a preferred niche for some important bacterial phytopathogens, some of them encoding expansin proteins, which bind plant cell walls. Yet, the identity of the substrate for bacterial expansins within the plant cell wall and the nature of its interaction with it are poorly known. Here, we determined the localization of two bacterial expansins with differing isoelectric points (and with differing binding patterns to cell wall extracts) on plant tissue through in vitro fluorophore labeling and confocal imaging. Differential localization was observed, in which Exl1 from Pectobacterium carotovorum located into the intercellular spaces between xylem vessels and adjacent cells of the plant xylem, whereas EXLX1 from Bacillus subtilis bound cell walls of most cell types. In isolated vascular tissue, however, both PcExl1 and BsEXLX1 preferentially bound to tracheary elements over the xylem fibers, even though both are composed of secondary cell walls. Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, employed to analyze the interaction of expansins with isolated xylem, indicates that binding is governed by more than one factor, which could include interaction with more than one type of polymer in the fibers, such as cellulose and hemicellulose or pectin. Binding to different polysaccharides could explain the observed reduction of cellulolytic and xylanolytic activities in the presence of expansin, possibly because of competition for the substrate. Our findings are relevant for the comprehensive understanding of the pathogenesis by P. carotovorum during xylem invasion, a process in which Exl1 might be involved.
AB - The plant xylem is a preferred niche for some important bacterial phytopathogens, some of them encoding expansin proteins, which bind plant cell walls. Yet, the identity of the substrate for bacterial expansins within the plant cell wall and the nature of its interaction with it are poorly known. Here, we determined the localization of two bacterial expansins with differing isoelectric points (and with differing binding patterns to cell wall extracts) on plant tissue through in vitro fluorophore labeling and confocal imaging. Differential localization was observed, in which Exl1 from Pectobacterium carotovorum located into the intercellular spaces between xylem vessels and adjacent cells of the plant xylem, whereas EXLX1 from Bacillus subtilis bound cell walls of most cell types. In isolated vascular tissue, however, both PcExl1 and BsEXLX1 preferentially bound to tracheary elements over the xylem fibers, even though both are composed of secondary cell walls. Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, employed to analyze the interaction of expansins with isolated xylem, indicates that binding is governed by more than one factor, which could include interaction with more than one type of polymer in the fibers, such as cellulose and hemicellulose or pectin. Binding to different polysaccharides could explain the observed reduction of cellulolytic and xylanolytic activities in the presence of expansin, possibly because of competition for the substrate. Our findings are relevant for the comprehensive understanding of the pathogenesis by P. carotovorum during xylem invasion, a process in which Exl1 might be involved.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85049260552&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsomega.8b00406
DO - 10.1021/acsomega.8b00406
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85049260552
SN - 2470-1343
VL - 3
SP - 7008
EP - 7018
JO - ACS Omega
JF - ACS Omega
IS - 6
ER -