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1.
Adhesion to host tissue is one of the key steps of the bacterial pathogenic process. Xanthomonas citri ssp. citri possesses a non‐fimbrial adhesin protein, XacFhaB, required for bacterial attachment, which we have previously demonstrated to be an important virulence factor for the development of citrus canker. XacFhaB is a 4753‐residue‐long protein with a predicted β‐helical fold structure, involved in bacterial aggregation, biofilm formation and adhesion to the host. In this work, to further characterize this protein and considering its large size, XacFhaB was dissected into three regions based on bioinformatic and structural analyses for functional studies. First, the capacity of these protein regions to aggregate bacterial cells was analysed. Two of these regions were able to form bacterial aggregates, with the most amino‐terminal region being dispensable for this activity. Moreover, XacFhaB shows features resembling pathogen‐associated molecular patterns (PAMPs), which are recognized by plants. As PAMPs activate plant basal immune responses, the role of the three XacFhaB regions as elicitors of these responses was investigated. All adhesin regions were able to induce basal immune responses in host and non‐host plants, with a stronger activation by the carboxyl‐terminal region. Furthermore, pre‐infiltration of citrus leaves with XacFhaB regions impaired X. citri ssp. citri growth, confirming the induction of defence responses and restraint of citrus canker. This work reveals that adhesins from plant pathogens trigger plant defence responses, opening up new pathways for the development of protective strategies for disease control.  相似文献   

2.
Citrus bacterial canker caused by Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri is a serious disease that impacts citrus production worldwide, and X. axonopodis pv. citri is listed as a quarantine pest in certain countries. Biofilm formation is important for the successful development of a pathogenic relationship between various bacteria and their host(s). To understand the mechanisms of biofilm formation by X. axonopodis pv. citri strain XW19, the strain was subjected to transposon mutagenesis. One mutant with a mutation in a two-component response regulator gene that was deficient in biofilm formation on a polystyrene microplate was selected for further study. The protein was designated as BfdR for biofilm formation defective regulator. BfdR from strain XW19 shares 100% amino acid sequence identity with XAC1284 of X. axonopodis pv. citri strain 306 and 30–100% identity with two-component response regulators in various pathogens and environmental microorganisms. The bfdR mutant strain exhibited significantly decreased biofilm formation on the leaf surfaces of Mexican lime compared with the wild type strain. The bfdR mutant was also compromised in its ability to cause canker lesions. The wild-type phenotype was restored by providing pbfdR in trans in the bfdR mutant. Our data indicated that BfdR did not regulate the production of virulence-related extracellular enzymes including amylase, lipase, protease, and lecithinase or the expression of hrpG, rfbC, and katE; however, BfdR controlled the expression of rpfF in XVM2 medium, which mimics cytoplasmic fluids in planta. In conclusion, biofilm formation on leaf surfaces of citrus is important for canker development in X. axonopodis pv. citri XW19. The process is controlled by the two-component response regulator BfdR via regulation of rpfF, which is required for the biosynthesis of a diffusible signal factor.  相似文献   

3.
Citrus canker provoked by Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri is a bacterial disease causing severe losses in all citrus-producing areas around the world. Xanthomonas infection is considered as an endemic disease in Northeast and Northwest Argentina, affecting as much as 10% of commercial citrus plantations. There is not known natural resistance neither in orange varieties nor in rootstocks used for grafting of commercial cultivars. To introduce resistance to this disease, plants of Pineapple sweet orange were transformed with a genetic construct allowing constitutive accumulation of dermaseptin. In comparison with non-transformed plants, transgenic plants showed symptom reduction levels of up to 50% in in planta assays performed under controlled conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Bacterial blight caused by Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. punicae (Xap) is a major disease in pomegranate (Punica granatum) cultivation in India. The Xap strains from three distinct geographical origins, Delhi, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh were studied for their genetic variability and phylogenetic relationship with other Xanthomonads targeting two important loci 16S rRNA and gyrB. All Xap strains showed 100 % sequence conservation in both the loci, suggesting that geographical origin does not necessarily reflect variation to genetic make-up of the Xap. Phylogeny derived from 16S rRNA gene revealed that two Xanthomonas species, Xanthomonas citri subsp. malvacearum DSM 3849 T and X. axonopodis pv. manihotis NCPPB1834 formed a single cluster along with Xap. Further, analysis in the gyrB locus indicated that X. citri subsp. malvacearum shared 99.4 % identity while pathovars X. axonopodis pv. manihotis shared only 95 % identity with the Xap strains. Thus, we established that gyrB was the preferred locus over 16S rRNA gene to discriminate the Xap strains from closely related Xanthomonas species type strains. Nevertheless, our study demonstrated for the first time that pomegranate bacterial blight pathogen is phylogenetically very close to Xanthomonas citri subsp. malvacearum infecting cotton.  相似文献   

5.
Citrus canker disease, caused by Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri, affects almost all citrus species and cultivars and hascaused severe damage to the citrus industry worldwide. PthA is considered the main pathogenesis effector of the pathogen. This research aimed to temporally and spatially analyze the expression of the PthA protein of the bactrium during its culture, and then try to understand the relationship between the PthA expression levels and the pathogenicity. The relationship between the expression of PthA and the pathogenicity of X. axonopodis pv. citri was fully investigated by using SDS-PAGE, Western blot, ELISA and field inoculation, It was found that bacteria cultured for 36 h had the highest expression of PthA and showed the most virulent pathogenicity. The conservation duration of the pathogen isolates influenced their PthA expression and the pathogenicity, and negative relationship between the duration and the expression of PthA and pathogenicity. When the stored pathogen bacteria were cultured in liquid LB medium, they were able to regain activated, showing higher PthA expression level and enhanced pathogenicity, even though the activity was inferior, in terms of both PthA expression and pathogenicity, than the freshly isolated ones. Seven isolates from different citrus orchards displayed almost identical protein expression profiles. It could conclude that the expressions of PthA was positively related to pathogenicity.  相似文献   

6.
《PloS one》2013,8(11)
Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. manihotis (Xam) is the causal agent of bacterial blight of cassava, which is among the main components of human diet in Africa and South America. Current information about the molecular pathogenicity factors involved in the infection process of this organism is limited. Previous studies in other bacteria in this genus suggest that advanced draft genome sequences are valuable resources for molecular studies on their interaction with plants and could provide valuable tools for diagnostics and detection. Here we have generated the first manually annotated high-quality draft genome sequence of Xam strain CIO151. Its genomic structure is similar to that of other xanthomonads, especially Xanthomonas euvesicatoria and Xanthomonas citri pv. citri species. Several putative pathogenicity factors were identified, including type III effectors, cell wall-degrading enzymes and clusters encoding protein secretion systems. Specific characteristics in this genome include changes in the xanthomonadin cluster that could explain the lack of typical yellow color in all strains of this pathovar and the presence of 50 regions in the genome with atypical nucleotide composition. The genome sequence was used to predict and evaluate 22 variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) loci that were subsequently demonstrated as polymorphic in representative Xam strains. Our results demonstrate that Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. manihotis strain CIO151 possesses ten clusters of pathogenicity factors conserved within the genus Xanthomonas. We report 126 genes that are potentially unique to Xam, as well as potential horizontal transfer events in the history of the genome. The relation of these regions with virulence and pathogenicity could explain several aspects of the biology of this pathogen, including its ability to colonize both vascular and non-vascular tissues of cassava plants. A set of 16 robust, polymorphic VNTR loci will be useful to develop a multi-locus VNTR analysis scheme for epidemiological surveillance of this disease.  相似文献   

7.

Background

The uptake of sulphur-containing compounds plays a pivotal role in the physiology of bacteria that live in aerobic soils where organosulfur compounds such as sulphonates and sulphate esters represent more than 95% of the available sulphur. Until now, no information has been available on the uptake of sulphonates by bacterial plant pathogens, particularly those of the Xanthomonas genus, which encompasses several pathogenic species. In the present study, we characterised the alkanesulphonate uptake system (Ssu) of Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri 306 strain (X. citri), the etiological agent of citrus canker.

Methodology/Principal Findings

A single operon-like gene cluster (ssuEDACB) that encodes both the sulphur uptake system and enzymes involved in desulphurisation was detected in the genomes of X. citri and of the closely related species. We characterised X. citri SsuA protein, a periplasmic alkanesulphonate-binding protein that, together with SsuC and SsuB, defines the alkanesulphonate uptake system. The crystal structure of SsuA bound to MOPS, MES and HEPES, which is herein described for the first time, provides evidence for the importance of a conserved dipole in sulphate group coordination, identifies specific amino acids interacting with the sulphate group and shows the presence of a rather large binding pocket that explains the rather wide range of molecules recognised by the protein. Isolation of an isogenic ssuA-knockout derivative of the X. citri 306 strain showed that disruption of alkanesulphonate uptake affects both xanthan gum production and generation of canker lesions in sweet orange leaves.

Conclusions/Significance

The present study unravels unique structural and functional features of the X. citri SsuA protein and provides the first experimental evidence that an ABC uptake system affects the virulence of this phytopathogen.  相似文献   

8.
9.

Background

Citrus canker is a disease that has severe economic impact on the citrus industry worldwide. There are three types of canker, called A, B, and C. The three types have different phenotypes and affect different citrus species. The causative agent for type A is Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri, whose genome sequence was made available in 2002. Xanthomonas fuscans subsp. aurantifolii strain B causes canker B and Xanthomonas fuscans subsp. aurantifolii strain C causes canker C.

Results

We have sequenced the genomes of strains B and C to draft status. We have compared their genomic content to X. citri subsp. citri and to other Xanthomonas genomes, with special emphasis on type III secreted effector repertoires. In addition to pthA, already known to be present in all three citrus canker strains, two additional effector genes, xopE3 and xopAI, are also present in all three strains and are both located on the same putative genomic island. These two effector genes, along with one other effector-like gene in the same region, are thus good candidates for being pathogenicity factors on citrus. Numerous gene content differences also exist between the three cankers strains, which can be correlated with their different virulence and host range. Particular attention was placed on the analysis of genes involved in biofilm formation and quorum sensing, type IV secretion, flagellum synthesis and motility, lipopolysacharide synthesis, and on the gene xacPNP, which codes for a natriuretic protein.

Conclusion

We have uncovered numerous commonalities and differences in gene content between the genomes of the pathogenic agents causing citrus canker A, B, and C and other Xanthomonas genomes. Molecular genetics can now be employed to determine the role of these genes in plant-microbe interactions. The gained knowledge will be instrumental for improving citrus canker control.  相似文献   

10.
Xanthan-deficient mutants of Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri, the bacterium responsible for citrus canker, were generated by deletion and marker exchange of the region encoding the carboxy-terminal end of the first glycosyltransferase, GumD. Mutants of gumD did not produce xanthan and remained pathogenic in citrus plants to the same extent as wild-type bacteria. The kinetics of appearance of initial symptoms, areas of plant material affected, and growth of bacteria inside plant tissue throughout the disease process were similar for both wild-type and mutant inoculations. Moreover, exopolysaccharide deficiency did not impair the ability of the bacteria to induce hypersensitive response on non-host plants. Apart from variations in phenotypic aspects, no differences in growth or survival under different stress conditions were observed between the xanthan-deficient mutant and wild-type bacteria. However, gumD mutants displayed impaired survival under oxidative stress during stationary phase as well as impaired epiphytic survival on citrus leaves. Our results suggest that xanthan does not play an essential role in citrus canker at the initial stages of infection or in the incompatible interactions between X. axonopodis pv. citri and non-host plants, but facilitates the maintenance of bacteria on the host plant, possibly improving the efficiency of colonization of distant tissue.  相似文献   

11.
Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri (Xac), the bacterium that causes citrus canker, contains a gene in the hrp [for hypersensitive response (HR) and pathogenicity] cluster that encodes a harpin protein called Hpa1. Hpa1 produced HR in the nonhost plants tobacco, pepper and Arabidopsis, whereas, in the host plant citrus, it elicited a weak defence response with no visible phenotype. Co‐infiltrations of Xac with or without the recombinant Hpa1 protein in citrus leaves produced a larger number of cankers in the presence of the protein. To characterize the effect of Hpa1 during the disease, an XacΔhpa1 mutant was constructed, and infiltration of this mutant caused a smaller number of cankers. In addition, the lack of Hpa1 hindered bacterial aggregation both in solution and in planta. Analysis of citrus leaves infiltrated with Hpa1 revealed alterations in mesophyll morphology caused by the presence of cavitations and crystal idioblasts, suggesting the binding of the harpin to plant membranes and the elicitation of signalling cascades. Overall, these results suggest that, even though Hpa1 elicits the defence response in nonhost plants and, to a lesser extent, in host plants, its main roles in citrus canker are to alter leaf mesophyll structure and to aggregate bacterial cells, and thus increase virulence and pathogen fitness. We expressed the N‐terminal and C‐terminal regions and found that, although both regions elicited HR in nonhost plants, only the N‐terminal region showed increased virulence and bacterial aggregation, supporting the role of this region of the protein as the main active domain.  相似文献   

12.
The phytopathogenic bacterium Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri is responsible for the canker disease affecting citrus plants throughout the world. Here, we have evaluated the role of bacterial attachment and biofilm formation in leaf colonization during canker development on lemon leaves. Crystal violet staining and confocal laser scanning microscopy analysis of X. axonopodis pv. citri strains expressing the green fluorescent protein were used to evaluate attachment and biofilm formation on abiotic and biotic (leaf) surfaces. Wild-type X. axonopodis pv. citri attached to and formed a complex, structured biofilm on glass in minimal medium containing glucose. Similar attachment and structured biofilm formation also were seen on lemon leaves. An X. axonopodis pv. citri gumB mutant strain, defective in production of the extracellular polysaccharide xanthan, did not form a structured biofilm on either abiotic or biotic surfaces. In addition, the X. axonopodis pv. citri gumB showed reduced growth and survival on leaf surfaces and reduced disease symptoms. These findings suggest an important role for formation of biofilms in the epiphytic survival of X. axonopodis pv. citri prior to development of canker disease.  相似文献   

13.
Xanthomonas citri pv. citri is a clonal group of strains that causes citrus canker disease and appears to have originated in Asia. A phylogenetically distinct clonal group that causes identical disease symptoms on susceptible citrus, X. citri pv. aurantifolii, arose more recently in South America. Genomes of X. citri pv. aurantifolii strains carry two DNA fragments that hybridize to pthA, an X. citri pv. citri gene which encodes a major type III pathogenicity effector protein that is absolutely required to cause citrus canker. Marker interruption mutagenesis and complementation revealed that X. citri pv. aurantifolii strain B69 carried one functional pthA homolog, designated pthB, that was required to cause cankers on citrus. Gene pthB was found among 38 open reading frames on a 37,106-bp plasmid, designated pXcB, which was sequenced and annotated. No additional pathogenicity effectors were found on pXcB, but 11 out of 38 open reading frames appeared to encode a type IV transfer system. pXcB transferred horizontally in planta, without added selection, from B69 to a nonpathogenic X. citri pv. citri (pthA::Tn5) mutant strain, fully restoring canker. In planta transfer efficiencies were very high (>0.1%/recipient) and equivalent to those observed for agar medium with antibiotic selection, indicating that pthB conferred a strong selective advantage to the recipient strain. A single pathogenicity effector that can confer a distinct selective advantage in planta may both facilitate plasmid survival following horizontal gene transfer and account for the origination of phylogenetically distinct groups of strains causing identical disease symptoms.  相似文献   

14.
Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri (Xac) causes citrus canker, provoking defoliation and premature fruit drop with concomitant economical damage. In plant pathogenic bacteria, lipopolysaccharides are important virulence factors, and they are being increasingly recognized as major pathogen-associated molecular patterns for plants. In general, three domains are recognized in a lipopolysaccharide: the hydrophobic lipid A, the hydrophilic O-antigen polysaccharide, and the core oligosaccharide, connecting lipid A and O-antigen. In this work, we have determined the structure of purified lipopolysaccharides obtained from Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri wild type and a mutant of the O-antigen ABC transporter encoded by the wzt gene. High pH anion exchange chromatography and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrum analysis were performed, enabling determination of the structure not only of the released oligosaccharides and lipid A moieties but also the intact lipopolysaccharides. The results demonstrate that Xac wild type and Xacwzt LPSs are composed mainly of a penta- or tetra-acylated diglucosamine backbone attached to either two pyrophosphorylethanolamine groups or to one pyrophosphorylethanolamine group and one phosphorylethanolamine group. The core region consists of a branched oligosaccharide formed by Kdo2Hex6GalA3Fuc3NAcRha4 and two phosphate groups. As expected, the presence of a rhamnose homo-oligosaccharide as O-antigen was determined only in the Xac wild type lipopolysaccharide. In addition, we have examined how lipopolysaccharides from Xac function in the pathogenesis process. We analyzed the response of the different lipopolysaccharides during the stomata aperture closure cycle, the callose deposition, the expression of defense-related genes, and reactive oxygen species production in citrus leaves, suggesting a functional role of the O-antigen from Xac lipopolysaccharides in the basal response.  相似文献   

15.
Several Gram-negative bacterial pathogens have developed type III secretion systems (T3SSs) to deliver virulence proteins directly into eukaryotic cells in a process essential for many diseases. The type III secretion processes require customized chaperones with high specificity for binding partners, thus providing the secretion to occur. Due to the very low sequence similarities among secretion chaperones, annotation and discrimination of a great majority of them is extremely difficult and a task with low scores even if genes are encountered that codify for small (<20 kDa) proteins with low pI and a tendency to dimerise. Concerning about this, herein, we present structural features on two hypothetical T3SSs chaperones belonging to plant pathogen Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri and suggest how low resolution models based on Small Angle X-ray Scattering patterns can provide new structural insights that could be very helpful in their analysis and posterior classification.  相似文献   

16.
A major problem in studying bacterial plant pathogens is obtaining the microorganism directly from the plant tissue to perform in vivo expression (protein or mRNA) analyses. Here we report an easy and fast protocol to isolate Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri directly from the host plant, in sufficient amounts to perform protein fingerprinting by 2-D gel electrophoresis as well as RNA expression assays. The protein profile obtained was very similar to that of X. axonopodis pv. citri grown in the presence of a leaf extract of Citrus sinensis; however, some differential proteins expressed in vivo were observed. Total RNA extraction revealed typical 16S and 23S bands in the agarose gel, and RT-PCR reactions using primers specific for genes of the bacterium confirmed the quality of the RNA preparation. Also, RT-PCR reactions using plant ribosomal primers were employed, and no amplification product was obtained, indicating that plant RNA is not present in the bacterium RNA sample.  相似文献   

17.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is an important virulence factor of Xanthomonas citri ssp. citri, the causative agent of citrus canker disease. In this research, a novel gene, designated as nlxA (novel LPS cluster gene of X. citri ssp. citri), in the LPS cluster of X. citri ssp. citri 306, was characterized. Our results indicate that nlxA is required for O‐polysaccharide biosynthesis by encoding a putative rhamnosyltransferase. This is supported by several lines of evidence: (i) NlxA shares 40.14% identity with WsaF, which acts as a rhamnosyltransferase; (ii) sodium dodecylsulphate‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis showed that four bands of the O‐antigen part of LPS were missing in the LPS production of the nlxA mutant; this is also consistent with a previous report that the O‐antigen moiety of LPS of X. citri ssp. citri is composed of a rhamnose homo‐oligosaccharide; (iii) mutation of nlxA resulted in a significant reduction in the resistance of X. citri ssp. citri to different stresses, including sodium dodecylsulphate, polymyxin B, H2O2, phenol, CuSO4 and ZnSO4. In addition, our results indicate that nlxA plays an important role in extracellular polysaccharide production, biofilm formation, stress resistance, motility on semi‐solid plates, virulence and in planta growth in the host plant grapefruit.  相似文献   

18.
Molecular typing was applied and optimized for genetic characterization for three pathogenic variants of Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri (Xac) from Taiwan. These three novel variants of atypical symptom–producing X. axonopodis pv. citri were designated as Xac‐Af, Xac‐Ap and Xac‐Ar. Based on polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with primers specific to X. axonopodis pv. citri, leucine‐responsive regulatory protein (lrp) gene assay and DNA fingerprintings generated by repetitive‐sequence PCR (rep‐PCR) and amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) were used to compare strains including the three types of atypical symptom–producing strains Xac‐Af, Xac‐Ap and Xac‐Ar, and additional reference strains from pathotypes Xac‐A, Xac‐A*, Xac‐Aw, X. axonopodis pv. auruantifolii and X. axonopodis pv. citrumelo. These three types of X. axonopodis pv. citri variants can be detected with six sets of primer specific for X. axonopodis pv. citri. Cluster analyses by lrp sequence assay, AFLP and combing the band patterns of rep‐PCR clearly grouped the atypical symptom–producing variants in types Xac‐ Af, Xac‐Ar and Xac‐Ap into the same cluster with typical symptom‐producing strains in pathotype Xac‐A. These three types of X. axonopodis pv. citri variants could be excluded from strains of Xac‐A* and Xac‐Aw in these genotypic analyses. Strains of Xac‐A* and Xac‐Aw were closely related to Xac‐A strains in our results. No Taiwan isolate was related to X. axonopodis pv. auruantifolii or X. axonopodis pv. citrumelo. The results further confirmed the atypical symptom–producing variants of X. axonopodis pv. citri in Taiwan belong to pathotype Xac‐A.  相似文献   

19.
Genome annotation of the plant pathogen Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri (Xac), identified flagellar genes in a 15.7 kb gene cluster. However, FlgN, a secretion chaperone for hook-associated proteins FlgK and FlgL, was not identified. We performed extensive screening of the X. axonopodis pv. citri genome with the yeast two-hybrid system to identify a protein with the characteristics of the flagellar chaperone FlgN. We found a candidate (XAC1990) encoded by an operon for components of the flagellum apparatus that interacted with FlgK. In order to further support this finding, Xac FlgK and XAC1990 were cloned, expressed, and purified. The recombinant proteins were characterized by spectroscopic methods and their interaction in vitro confirmed by pull-down assays. We, therefore, conclude that XAC1990 and its homologs in other Xanthomonas species are, in fact, FlgN proteins. These observations extend the sequence diversity covered by this family of proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri is a phytopathogen bacterium that causes severe citrus canker disease. Similar to other phytopathogens, after infection by this bacterium, plants trigger a defense mechanism that produces reactive oxygen species. Ferredoxin-NADP+ reductases (FNRs) are redox flavoenzymes that participate in several metabolic functions, including the response to reactive oxygen species. Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri has a gene (fpr) that encodes for a FNR (Xac-FNR) that belongs to the subclass I bacterial FNRs. The aim of this work was to search for the physiological role of this enzyme and to characterize its structural and functional properties. The functionality of Xac-FNR was tested by cross-complementation of a FNR knockout Escherichia coli strain, which exhibit high susceptibility to agents that produce an abnormal accumulation of O2 -. Xac-FNR was able to substitute for the FNR in E. coli in its antioxidant role. The expression of fpr in X. axonopodis pv. citri was assessed using semiquantitative RT-PCR and Western blot analysis. A 2.2-fold induction was observed in the presence of the superoxide-generating agents methyl viologen and 2,3-dimethoxy-1,4-naphthoquinone. Structural and functional studies showed that Xac-FNR displayed different functional features from other subclass I bacterial FNRs. Our analyses suggest that these differences may be due to the unusual carboxy-terminal region. We propose a further classification of subclass I bacterial FNRs, which is useful to determine the nature of their ferredoxin redox partners. Using sequence analysis, we identified a ferredoxin (XAC1762) as a potential substrate of Xac-FNR. The purified ferredoxin protein displayed the typical broad UV-visible spectrum of [4Fe-4S] clusters and was able to function as substrate of Xac-FNR in the cytochrome c reductase activity. Our results suggest that Xac-FNR is involved in the oxidative stress response of Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri and performs its biological function most likely through the interaction with ferredoxin XAC1762.  相似文献   

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