The structure of a pyoverdine produced by a Pseudomonas tolaasii-like isolate |
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Authors: | Diana Uría Fernández Regine Fuchs Kambiz Taraz Herbert Budzikiewicz Patricia Munsch Jean-Marie Meyer |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institut für Organische Chemie der Universität zu Köln, Greinstr. 4, 50939 Köln, Germany;(2) Department of Physical Sciences/Biophysics, University of Oulu, PL 3000, 90014 Linnanmaa, Finland;(3) Laboratoire de Microbiologie et Génétique, UPRES-A 7010 du CNRS, Université Louis-Pasteur, 28 rue Goethe, 67000 Strasbourg, France |
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Abstract: | Cultures of Agaricus bisporus, the most extensively cultivated mushroom, can be infected severely by Pseudomonas tolaasii. This pathogen is characterized by the so-called white line reaction, a precipitate formed on agar plates between its colonies and those of P. reactans, both belonging to the collective species P. fluorescens. A recent study has shown that a group of P. tolaasii isolates can be subdivided into two groups or 'siderovars', based on the pyoverdines they produce (Munsch et al. 2000). One group of strains is characterized by the pyoverdine described by Demange et al. (1990). A representative of the second group (strain Ps3a) was found to produce the same pyoverdine as a strain which had been classified before as P. aureofaciens. However, based mainly on 16S rRNA gene sequence comparisons and REP-PCR generated fingerprints, the two strains are not identical. They are also distinguishable from the P. tolaasii type strain. |
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Keywords: | Pseudomonas tolaasii mushroom infection pyoverdine |
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