Structural Characterization of a Flavonoid-Inducible Pseudomonas aeruginosa A-Band-Like O Antigen of Rhizobium sp. Strain NGR234, Required for the Formation of Nitrogen-Fixing Nodules
Open Access
- 15 September 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Bacteriology
- Vol. 187 (18) , 6479-6487
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.187.18.6479-6487.2005
Abstract
Rhizobium ( Sinorhizobium ) sp. strain NGR234 contains three replicons, the smallest of which (pNGR234 a ) carries most symbiotic genes, including those required for nodulation and lipo-chito-oligosaccharide (Nod factor) biosynthesis. Activation of nod gene expression depends on plant-derived flavonoids, NodD transcriptional activators, and nod box promoter elements. Nod boxes NB6 and NB7 delimit six different types of genes, one of which ( fixF ) is essential for the formation of effective nodules on Vigna unguiculata . In vegetative culture, wild-type NGR234 produces a distinct, flavonoid-inducible lipopolysaccharide (LPS) that is not produced by the mutant (NGRΩ fixF ); this LPS is also found in nitrogen-fixing bacteroids isolated from V. unguiculata infected with NGR234. Electron microscopy showed that peribacteroid membrane formation is perturbed in nodule cells infected by the fixF mutant. LPSs were purified from free-living NGR234 cultured in the presence of apigenin. Structural analyses showed that the polysaccharide portions of these LPSs are specialized, rhamnose-containing O antigens attached to a modified core-lipid A carrier. The primary sequence of the O antigen is [-3)-α- l -Rha p -(1,3)-α- l -Rha p -(1,2)-α- l -Rha p -(1-] n , and the LPS core region lacks the acidic sugars commonly associated with the antigenic outer core of LPS from noninduced cells. This rhamnan O antigen, which is absent from noninduced cells, has the same primary sequence as the A-band O antigen of Pseudomonas aeruginosa , except that it is composed of l -rhamnose rather than the d -rhamnose characteristic of the latter. It is noteworthy that A-band LPS is selectively maintained on the P. aeruginosa cell surface during chronic cystic fibrosis lung infection, where it is associated with an increased duration of infection.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- 2-O-Methylation of Fucosyl Residues of a Rhizobial Lipopolysaccharide Is Increased in Response to Host Exudate and Is Eliminated in a Symbiotically Defective MutantApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2004
- Structural Characterization of the Lipid A Component of Sinorhizobium sp. NGR234 Rough and Smooth Form LipopolysaccharidePublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Structural Characterization of the O-antigenic Polysaccharide of the Lipopolysaccharide from Rhizobium etli Strain CE3Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2000
- A Sinorhizobium meliloti Lipopolysaccharide Mutant Induces Effective Nodules on the Host Plant Medicago sativa (Alfalfa) but Fails to Establish a Symbiosis with Medicago truncatulaMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1998
- The presence of a novel type of surface polysaccharide in Rhizobium meliloti requires a new fatty acid synthase‐like gene cluster involved in symbiotic nodule developmentMolecular Microbiology, 1993
- Alcian blue fixation allows silver staining of the isolated polysaccharide component of bacterial lipopolysaccharides in polyacrylamide gelsElectrophoresis, 1991
- Screening costramid libraries for chromosomal genes: an alternative interspecific hybridization methodFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1987
- An efficient mobilizable cosmid vector, pRK7813, and its use in a rapid method for marker exchange in Pseudomonas fluorescens strain HV37aGene, 1987
- MLEV-17-based two-dimensional homonuclear magnetization transfer spectroscopyJournal of Magnetic Resonance (1969), 1985
- Coherence transfer by isotropic mixing: Application to proton correlation spectroscopyJournal of Magnetic Resonance (1969), 1983