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1.
Abstract. Genomic islands are regions of the bacterial genome responsible for unique aspects of bacterial behaviour, such as host symbiosis and pathogenicity. Where such regions are involved in pathogenesis, they are termed pathogenicity islands (PAIs). Photorhabdus luminescens is an insect pathogen that spends part of its life in symbiosis with a nematode and part of its life as an insect pathogen. Here, several novel PAIs from P. luminescens ssp. akhurstii strain W14 are described that encode factors involved apparently in both nematode symbiosis and insect pathogenicity. The structures of these islands are compared with those found in mammalian pathogens, and the potential cross‐talk between virulence factors used against invertebrates and those used against vertebrates is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The nematode Heterorhabditis bacteriophora is the vector for transmitting the entomopathogenic bacterium Photorhabdus luminescens between insect larvae. The dauer juvenile (DJ) stage nematode selectively retains P. luminescens in its intestine until it releases the bacteria into the hemocoel of an insect host. We report the results of studying the transmission of the bacteria by its nematode vector. Cells of P. luminescens labeled with green fluorescent protein preferentially colonized a region of the DJ intestine immediately behind the basal bulb, extending for various distances toward the anus. Incubation of DJ nematodes in vitro in insect hemolymph induced regurgitation of the bacteria. Following a 30-min lag, the bacteria migrated in a gradual and staggered movement toward and ultimately exited the mouth. This regurgitation reaction was induced by a low-molecular-weight, heat- and protease-stable, anionic component present in arthropod hemolymph and in supernatants from insect cell cultures. Nematodes anesthetized with levamisole or treated with the antihelmenthic agent ivermectin did not release their bacteria into hemolymph. The ability to visualize P. luminescens in the DJ nematode intestine provides the first clues to the mechanism of release of the bacteria during infection of insect larvae. This and the partial characterization of a component of hemolymph triggering release of the bacteria render this fascinating example of both a mutualistic symbiosis and disease transmission amenable to future genetic and molecular study.  相似文献   

3.
Heterorhabditis bacteriophora are entomopathogenic nematodes that have evolved a mutualism with Photorhabdus luminescens bacteria to function as highly virulent insect pathogens. The nematode provides a safe harbor for intestinal symbionts in soil and delivers the symbiotic bacteria into the insect blood. The symbiont provides virulence and toxins, metabolites essential for nematode reproduction, and antibiotic preservation of the insect cadaver. Approximately half of the 21,250 putative protein coding genes identified in the 77 Mbp high quality draft H. bacteriophora genome sequence were novel proteins of unknown function lacking homologs in Caenorhabditis elegans or any other sequenced organisms. Similarly, 317 of the 603 predicted secreted proteins are novel with unknown function in addition to 19 putative peptidases, 9 peptidase inhibitors and 7 C-type lectins that may function in interactions with insect hosts or bacterial symbionts. The 134 proteins contained mariner transposase domains, of which there are none in C. elegans, suggesting an invasion and expansion of mariner transposons in H. bacteriophora. Fewer Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes Orthologies in almost all metabolic categories were detected in the genome compared with 9 other sequenced nematode genomes, which may reflect dependence on the symbiont or insect host for these functions. The H. bacteriophora genome sequence will greatly facilitate genetics, genomics and evolutionary studies to gain fundamental knowledge of nematode parasitism and mutualism. It also elevates the utility of H. bacteriophora as a bridge species between vertebrate parasitic nematodes and the C. elegans model.  相似文献   

4.
The insect-parasitic rhabditoid nematodes,Steinernema feltiae andHeterorhabditis bacteriophora, released a compound/s/ toxic to larvae of the greater wax moth,Galleria mellonella, that caused paralysis and death of the insect. Larvicidal substances appeared in wax moth larvae during parasitism and after inoculation with the primary form of the bacterial associates of the nematodes. The nematodeS. feltiae and its associate,Xenorhabdus nematophilus, excreted much less toxic activity within larval body thanH. bacteriophora. The secondary form ofXenohabdus did not produce toxin in parasitized larvae, butX. luminescens, the bacterium associated withH. bacteriophora, released detectable titer of toxin activity in broth cultures. Both nematode toxins were sensitive to heat and produced a specific type of proteolytic activity. Preliminary identification of the compounds responsible for larval toxicity revealed similarities to immune inhibitors produced by some bacterial pathogens of insects.   相似文献   

5.
Heterorhabditis bacteriophora is used in biological control of soil-borne insect pests in horticulture and turf. Mass production is carried out in monoxenic liquid cultures pre-incubated with the symbiont of the nematodes, the bacterium Photorhabdus luminescens, before nematode dauer juveniles (DJ) are inoculated. As a response to bacterial food signals, the DJ recover from the developmentally arrested dauer stage, grow to adults and produce DJ offspring. Variable DJ recovery after inoculation into cultures of P. luminescens often causes process failure due to low numbers of adult nematodes in the medium. In order to enhance DJ recovery, improve nematode population management and increase yields, the optimal timing for DJ inoculation was sought. The process parameter pH and respiration quotient (RQ) were recorded in order to test whether changes can be used to identify the best moment for DJ inoculation. When DJ were inoculated during the lag and early logarithmic growth phases of P. luminescens cultures, DJ recovery was low and almost no nematode reproduction was obtained. High populations of P. luminescens phase variants were recorded. Recovery and yields increased when DJ were inoculated during the latter log phase during which the RQ dropped to values <0.8 and the pH reached a maximum. The highest DJ recovery and yields were observed in cultures that were inoculated during the late stationary growth phase. This period started with the increase of the pH after its distinct minimum at pH <8.0. Thus optimal timing for DJ inoculation can be defined through monitoring of the pH in the P. luminescens culture.  相似文献   

6.
Photorhabdus luminescens are bacterial symbionts of entomopathogenic nematodes of the genus Heterorhabditis. The bacto-helminthic complexes are used in biocontrol of insect pests in cryptic environments. For in vitro production, liquid media are incubated with P. luminescens for 24 h prior to the inoculation of nematode dauer juveniles. The nematodes develop to self-fertilizing hermaphrodites and produce offspring. The exit from the developmentally arrested dauer stage (recovery) is a response to a yet undescribed food signal. Major process instability is caused by low and unsynchronized recovery of the dauers. In living insects, dauer recovery is approximately 95% within 1 day. In liquid cultures of P. luminescens the recovery is spread over several days and varies between 0 and 81%. In complex culture media no food signal was detected. A food signal is produced by P. luminescens and excreted into the culture medium. The maximum food signal production was recorded during the late exponential growth phase. Compared to the food signal found in insects, the efficacy of the bacterial signal is much lower. The reasons for the variable activity of the bacterial food signal and its function during the nematode life cycle are discussed. Received: 13 March 1998 / Received revision: 15 June 1998 / Accepted: 19 June 1998  相似文献   

7.
Genomic islands are responsible for unique aspects of bacterial behavior such as symbiosis and pathogenicity. Photorhabdus luminescens is a pathogen of insects that spends part of its lifecycle in symbiosis with a nematode. Here, we describe novel genomic islands from Photorhabdus that are involved in symbiosis and pathogenicity, and discuss the inter-relationship between virulence factors used against invertebrates and vertebrates.  相似文献   

8.
Insect host age and diet were evaluated as potential factors that could affect the fitness of the entomopathogenic nematode-bacterium mutualistic partnership. Two nematode species were considered: Steinernema carpocapsae and Heterorhabditis sonorensis, together with their symbionts Xenorhabdus nematophila and Photorhabdus luminescens, respectively. The tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, was used as the insect host. Insect developmental stage was a factor that impacted nematode virulence. Non-wandering 5th instar M. sexta were found to be more susceptible to nematode infection compared to wandering 5th instars. This was more noticeable for S. carpocapsae than for H. sonorensis. The nutritional status of the host also had an effect on the fitness of the two nematode species tested. In general, insects fed with the reduced diet content were less susceptible to nematode parasitism. The least observed mortality (0.5 %) was in those M. sexta larvae exposed to the low H. sonorensis dose. Host diet also had an effect on the production of IJ progeny in the insect cadavers. For both nematode species tested, the highest yield of emerging IJs was observed from those insect hosts fed with the low nutrient diet and exposed to the highest nematode inoculum. However, for both nematode species tested, the nutritional status of the host did not significantly affect time of emergence of IJ progeny or the reassociation with their bacterial symbionts (expressed as cfu/IJ). This is the first study on the effect of insect host physiology on both EPN and their symbiotic bacteria fitness.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The virulence of different entomopathogenic nematode strains of the families Steinernematidae and Heterorhabditidae, isolates from Catalonia (NE Iberian Peninsula), and their symbiotic bacteria was assessed with regard to the larvae and adults of the hazelnut weevil, Curculio nucum L. (Coleoptera: Curculionidae). The nematode strains screened included one Steinernema affine, five Steinernema feltiae, one Steinernema carpocapsae, one Steinernema sp. (a new species not yet described) and one Heterorhabditis bacteriophora. The pathogenicity of all the strains of nematodes was tested on larvae and only four of them on adults of the hazelnut weevil. Larval mortality ranged from 10% with S. affine to 79% with Steinernema sp. Adult mortality was higher in S. carpocapsae, achieving 100% adult weevil mortality. The pathogenicity of the symbiotic bacteria Xenorhabdus bovienii, X. kozodoii, X. nematophila and Photorhabdus luminescens was studied in larvae and adults of C. nucum. In the larvae, X. kozodoii showed a LT50 of 22.7 h, and in the adults, it was 20.5 h. All nematodes species except S. affine tested against larvae showed great potential to control the insect, whereas S. carpocapsae was the most effective for controlling adults.  相似文献   

11.
The entomopathogenic nematode–bacteria complexes Heterorhabditis bacteriophora/Photorhabdus luminescens and Steinernema carpocapsae/Xenorhabdus nematophila are mass produced for use as biological insecticides. Stability of the bacterial partner in culture is essential for maintaining traits important for both biological control and production. Two geographically distinct strains of each bacterial species were isolated from their nematode partners and serially subcultured on in vitro media to assess trait stability. Subculturing resulted in a shift to secondary cell production in one P. luminescens strain and both X. nematophila strains within ten in vitro culture cycles. However, when cell phenotypic variation was controlled in X. nematophila strains by regular selection for primary variants, no trait change was detected in the primary variant after prolonged subculture. When P. luminescens cell phenotypic variation was controlled by selection for primary variants, changes in the primary variant of both strains were noted including reductions in cell and inclusion body size and inclusion body prevalence. Bacterial ability to cause lethal infections following injection into the hemocoel of Tenebrio molitor larvae declined by more than half in primary variants of one P. luminescens strain. Conversely, yield was enhanced, with the subcultured P. luminescens strains showing 53.5 and 75.8% increases in primary cell density. Field adapted traits of primary variant P. luminescens strains tend to deteriorate during in vitro culture as tradeoffs for gains in yield. In vitro producers of the P. luminescens/H. bacteriophora complex must weigh the need for superior bacterial yield against the need to preserve traits important for biological control.  相似文献   

12.
Ants were the most apparent invertebrate scavengers observed foraging on entomopathogenic nematode-killed insects (i.e., insect cadavers containing entomopathogenic nematodes and their symbiotic bacteria) in the present study. Workers of the Argentine ant,Linepithema humile(Mayr), scavenged nematode-killed insects on the surface and those buried 2 cm below the soil surface. Ant workers scavenged significantly more steinernematid-killed (60–85%) than heterorhabditid-killed (10–20%) insects. More 4-day-postinfected cadavers (hosts died within 48 h after exposure to nematodes) were scavenged than 10-day-postinfected cadavers. Ten-day-postinfected hosts contained live infective juvenile nematodes therefore ants may serve as phoretic agents. Other ant species, includingVeromessor andrei(Mayr),Pheidole vistanaForel,Formica pacificaFrancoeur, andMonomoriom ergatogynaWheeler, also scavenged nematode-killed insects. These ant species removed or destroyed about 45% of the steinernematid-killed insects. These results suggest that survival of steinernematid nematodes may be more significantly impacted by invertebrate scavengers, especially ants, than that of heterorhabditid nematodes, and placement of steinernematid-killed insects in the field for biological control may be an ineffective release strategy. Because entomopathogenic nematodes kill insects with the help of symbiotic bacteria, we tested the role of these bacterial species in deterring invertebrate scavengers by injecting bacteria (without nematodes) into insects and placing the cadavers in the field. None of the insects killed by the symbiotic bacterium,Photorhabdus luminescens(Thomas and Poinar) fromHeterorhabditis bacteriophoraPoinar, were scavanged, whereas 70% of the insects killed by the symbiotic bacterium,Xenorhabdus nematophilus(Poinar and Thomas) fromSteinernema carpocapsae(Weiser), and 90% of the insects killed byBacillus thuringiensisBerliner were scavenged by the Argentine ant. We conclude thatP. luminescensis responsible for preventing ants from foraging on heterorhabditid-killed hosts.  相似文献   

13.
Photorhabdus luminescens is a species of Gram‐negative bacteria that is pathogenic to insects while also maintaining a mutualistic association with nematodes from the family Heterorhabditis. P. luminescens elaborates an extensive secondary metabolism during the post‐exponential phase of growth that includes the production of an antibiotic called 3‐5‐dihydroxy‐4‐isopropylstilbene (ST), an anthraquinone pigment (AQ) and bioluminescence. In this study we identified a mutant that was unable to produce ST, AQ and light. This mutation was found to be in the mdh gene, encoding malate dehydrogenase, a key enzyme in the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. Interestingly the mdh mutant was unaffected in virulence but was unable to support nematode growth and development in vivo or in vitro. This clearly establishes that secondary metabolism in P. luminescens is required for the mutualistic interaction with the nematode. Furthermore, the construction of mutations in key genes in other central metabolic pathways confirmed the critical role for the TCA cycle in both secondary metabolism and mutualism, but not in virulence. Therefore, we conclude that the TCA cycle is required for the transition of P. luminescens from pathogen to mutualist implicating the involvement of a metabolic switch in the regulation of lifestyle decisions in this bacterium.  相似文献   

14.
The enteric gamma‐proteobacterium Photorhabdus luminescens kills a wide range of insects, whilst also maintaining a mutualistic relationship with soil nematodes from the family Heterorhabditis. Pathogenicity is associated with bacterial exponential growth, whilst mutualism is associated with post‐exponential (stationary) phase. During post‐exponential growth, P. luminescens also elaborates an extensive secondary metabolism, including production of bioluminescence, antibiotics and pigment. However, the regulatory network that controls the expression of this secondary metabolism is not well understood. The stringent response is a well‐described global regulatory system in bacteria and mediated by the alarmone (p)ppGpp. In this study, we disrupted the genes relA and spoT, encoding the two predicted (p)ppGpp synthases of P. luminescens TTO1, and we showed that (p)ppGpp is required for secondary metabolism. Moreover, we found the (p)ppGpp is not required for pathogenicity of P. luminescens, but is required for bacterial survival within the insect cadaver. Finally, we showed that (p)ppGpp is required for P. luminescens to support normal nematode growth and development. Therefore, the regulatory network that controls the transition from pathogenicity to mutualism in P. luminescens requires (p)ppGpp. This is the first report outlining a role for (p)ppGpp in controlling the outcome of an interaction between a bacteria and its host.  相似文献   

15.
Li M  Wu G  Liu C  Chen Y  Qiu L  Pang Y 《Molecular biology reports》2009,36(4):785-790
As an insect pathogen, Photorhabdus luminescens possesses an arsenal of toxins. Here we cloned and expressed a probable toxin from P. luminescens subsp. akhurstii YNd185, designated as Photorhabdus insecticidal toxin (Pit). The pit gene shares 94% nucleotide and 98% predicted amino acid sequence identity with plu1537, a predicted ORF from P. luminescens subsp. laumondii TT01 and 30% predicted amino acid sequence similarity to a fragment of a 13.6 kDa insecticidal crystal protein gene of Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt). The pit was expressed as a GST-Pit fusion protein in E. coli, most of which was insoluble and sequestered into inclusion bodies. The inclusion bodies were harvested and dissolved. The resultant protein was purified and the Pit was cleaved from the fusion protein by thrombin and purified from GST then used for bioassay. Pit killed Galleria mellonella (LD50, 30 ng/larva) and Spodoptera litura (LD50, 191 ng/larva) via hemocoel injection. Relative to a control that lacked toxin, Pit did not significantly increase mortality of S. litura and Helicoverpa armigera when introduced orally, but the treatment did inhibit growth of the insects. The present study demonstrated that Pit possessed insecticidal activity.  相似文献   

16.
To investigate nematode establishment and persistence, dauer juveniles (DJs) of Heterorhabditis bacteriophora were applied at 50 cm-2 in different crops in June and July with conventional spraying equipment and 420 l water ha-1. Application hardly had any effects on survival and infectivity. The number of DJs reaching the soil was assessed and the establishment and persistence recorded by baiting soil samples with larvae of the wax moth Galleria mellonella. The better the plant canopy was developed the fewer DJs reached the soil during application. Whereas in pasture 77% and in potatoes 78% of the applied nematodes reached the soil, in wheat and peas little less than 50%, in oil-seed rape only 5% and in lupine 6% were recorded. Between 50 and 60% of the soil samples contained H. bacteriophora a month after application with the exception of wheat (>90%) and potatoes (<5%) indicating that the number of nematodes reaching the soil during application had no influence on their establishment in the soil. Probably DJs can survive in the plant canopy and reach the soil later after application. The percentage of nematode-positive soil samples dropped considerably after tillage. In potatoes no nematodes were recovered after two months, which probably was also due to the intensive movement of the soil. Although nematodes are susceptible to freezing, temperatures below 0°C during the winter did not extinguish the H. bacteriophora population. In field crops EPN usually persisted not much longer than one year. The longest persistence of H. bacteriophora was detected 23 months after release in beans followed in rotation by wheat with red clover as cover crop. In this field larvae of the pea weevil Sitona lineatus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) were detected in soil samples and found infected with the released nematode population. In the laboratory the field soils were tested for persistence of H. bacteriophora at 8°C and a half-life of 24.8 days was recorded in the absence of host insects and plants. Thus long-term persistence in the field was a result of recycling in host insects, which could not be detected in other crops than beans and clover. As H. bacteriophora seems to be restricted in its host potential, this species disappears after release once the host population is not available anymore.  相似文献   

17.
The entomopathogenic nematode–bacterium complex Heterorhabditis bacteriophoraPhotorhabdus luminescens is used in commercial biocontrol of insect pests. Tolerance and activity of the nematodes at extreme environmental conditions can limit the shelf life, quality and field performance of nematode-based products. To overcome these limitations, the potential for genetic improvement of the heat tolerance and the activity at low temperature was investigated. Heat tolerance and cold activity are quantitative traits, influenced by several genes and environmental factors. The breeding success for such traits depends on the genetic proportion on the phenotypic variability, the heritability, which was determined by recording the variability within and between homozygous inbred lines. The heritability for heat tolerance was 0.68 and for activity at low temperature 0.38. To increase heat tolerance, 4 selection steps were carried out, which increased the mean tolerated temperature from 38.5 to 39.2 °C. The mean temperature at which the dauer juveniles of H. bacteriophora were active, could be reduced from 7.3 to 6.1 °C during the first 5 selection steps. However, for unknown reasons, it increased during the following 5 steps to 7.1 °C. A screening among different P. luminescens isolates for growth at low temperature resulted in several cold-adapted strains from North America, which reached considerable cell density at 6 °C.  相似文献   

18.
Photorhabdus luminescens, a bacterial symbiont of entomoparasitic nematodes, was cultured in a 10 L bioreactor. Cellular density and bioluminescence were recorded and volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient (kLa) and specific oxygen transfer rates were determined during the batch process. Exponential phase of the bacterium lasted for 20 h, showing a maximum specific growth rate of 0.339 h?1 in a defined medium. Bioluminescence peaked within 21h, and was maintained until the end of the batch process (48 h). The specific oxygen uptake rate (SOUR) was high during both lag and early exponential phase, and eventually reached a stable value of 0.33 mmol g?1 h?1 during stationary phase. Maintenance of 200 rpm agitation and 1.4 volume of air per volume of medium per minute (vvm) aeration, gave rise to a kLa value of 39.5 h?1. This kLa value was sufficient to meet the oxygen demand of 14.4 g L?1 (DCW) biomass. This research is particularly relevant since there are no reports available on SOURs of symbiotic bacteria or their nematode partners. The insight gained through this study will be useful during the development of a submerged monoxenic culture of Heterorhabditis bacteriophora and its symbiotic bacterium P. luminescens in bioreactors.  相似文献   

19.
20.

Background

Photorhabdus are Gram-negative nematode-symbiotic and insect-pathogenic bacteria. The species Photorhabdus asymbiotica is able to infect humans as well as insects. We investigated the secreted proteome of a clinical isolate of P. asymbiotica at different temperatures in order to identify proteins relevant to the infection of the two different hosts.

Results

A comparison of the proteins secreted by a clinical isolate of P. asymbiotica at simulated insect (28°C) and human (37°C) temperatures led to the identification of a small and highly abundant protein, designated Pam, that is only secreted at the lower temperature. The pam gene is present in all Photorhabdus strains tested and shows a high level of conservation across the whole genus, suggesting it is both ancestral to the genus and probably important to the biology of the bacterium. The Pam protein shows limited sequence similarity to the 13.6 kDa component of a binary toxin of Bacillus thuringiensis. Nevertheless, injection or feeding of heterologously produced Pam showed no insecticidal activity to either Galleria mellonella or Manduca sexta larvae. In bacterial colonies, Pam is associated with an extracellular polysaccharide (EPS)-like matrix, and modifies the ability of wild-type cells to attach to an artificial surface. Interestingly, Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) binding studies revealed that the Pam protein itself has adhesive properties. Although Pam is produced throughout insect infection, genetic knockout does not affect either insect virulence or the ability of P. luminescens to form a symbiotic association with its host nematode, Heterorhabditis bacteriophora.

Conclusions

We studied a highly abundant protein, Pam, which is secreted in a temperature-dependent manner in P. asymbiotica. Our findings indicate that Pam plays an important role in enhancing surface attachment in insect blood. Its association with exopolysaccharide suggests it may exert its effect through mediation of EPS properties. Despite its abundance and conservation in the genus, we find no evidence for a role of Pam in either virulence or symbiosis.  相似文献   

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