Center Rot of Onion (Allium cepa) Caused by Pantoea ananatis Requires pepM, a Predicted Phosphonate-Related Gene.
Jo Ann E AsselinJean M BonaseraSteven Vincent BeerPublished in: Molecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI (2018)
Pantoea ananatis, a cause of center rot of onion, is problematic in the United States and elsewhere. The bacterium lacks disease determinants common to most other bacterial pathogens of plants. A genomic island containing the gene pepM was detected within many onion-pathogenic strains of P. ananatis of diverse origins. The pepM gene of P. ananatis putatively encodes a protein that converts phosphoenolpyruvate to phosphonopyruvate, the first step in the biosynthesis of phosphonates and related molecules. This gene appears to be essential for center rot disease. Deletion of pepM rendered the mutant strain unable to cause lesions in leaves of growing onions and water-soaking of inoculated yellow onion bulbs. Furthermore, growth of the deletion mutant in onion leaves was significantly diminished compared with wild-type bacteria, and the mutant failed to cause cell death in tobacco. Complementation of the mutated strain with pepM restored the phenotype to wild-type capability. The pepM gene is the first pathogenicity factor identified that affects bacterial fitness as well as symptom development in both leaves and bulbs in a pathogen causing center rot of onion.