Plant-adapted Escherichia coli show increased lettuce colonizing ability, resistance to oxidative stress and chemotactic response.

Escherichia coli is a widespread gut commensal and often a versatile pathogen of public health concern. E. coli are also frequently found in different environments and/or alternative secondary hosts, such as plant tissues. The lifestyle of E. coli in plants is poorly understood and has potential imp...

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Main Authors: Maria de los Angeles Dublan, Juan Cesar Federico Ortiz-Marquez, Lina Lett, Leonardo Curatti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4196987?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-76dee1524ed64b868ffb6e3cb9ca0eb02020-11-24T21:32:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01910e11041610.1371/journal.pone.0110416Plant-adapted Escherichia coli show increased lettuce colonizing ability, resistance to oxidative stress and chemotactic response.Maria de los Angeles DublanJuan Cesar Federico Ortiz-MarquezLina LettLeonardo CurattiEscherichia coli is a widespread gut commensal and often a versatile pathogen of public health concern. E. coli are also frequently found in different environments and/or alternative secondary hosts, such as plant tissues. The lifestyle of E. coli in plants is poorly understood and has potential implications for food safety.This work shows that a human commensal strain of E. coli K12 readily colonizes lettuce seedlings and produces large microcolony-like cell aggregates in leaves, especially in young leaves, in proximity to the vascular tissue. Our observations strongly suggest that those cell aggregates arise from multiplication of single bacterial cells that reach those spots. We showed that E. coli isolated from colonized leaves progressively colonize lettuce seedlings to higher titers, suggesting a fast adaptation process. E. coli cells isolated from leaves presented a dramatic rise in tolerance to oxidative stress and became more chemotactic responsive towards lettuce leaf extracts. Mutant strains impaired in their chemotactic response were less efficient lettuce colonizers than the chemotactic isogenic strain. However, acclimation to oxidative stress and/or minimal medium alone failed to prime E. coli cells for enhanced lettuce colonization efficiency.These findings help to understand the physiological adaptation during the alternative lifestyle of E. coli in/on plant tissues.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4196987?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria de los Angeles Dublan
Juan Cesar Federico Ortiz-Marquez
Lina Lett
Leonardo Curatti
spellingShingle Maria de los Angeles Dublan
Juan Cesar Federico Ortiz-Marquez
Lina Lett
Leonardo Curatti
Plant-adapted Escherichia coli show increased lettuce colonizing ability, resistance to oxidative stress and chemotactic response.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Maria de los Angeles Dublan
Juan Cesar Federico Ortiz-Marquez
Lina Lett
Leonardo Curatti
author_sort Maria de los Angeles Dublan
title Plant-adapted Escherichia coli show increased lettuce colonizing ability, resistance to oxidative stress and chemotactic response.
title_short Plant-adapted Escherichia coli show increased lettuce colonizing ability, resistance to oxidative stress and chemotactic response.
title_full Plant-adapted Escherichia coli show increased lettuce colonizing ability, resistance to oxidative stress and chemotactic response.
title_fullStr Plant-adapted Escherichia coli show increased lettuce colonizing ability, resistance to oxidative stress and chemotactic response.
title_full_unstemmed Plant-adapted Escherichia coli show increased lettuce colonizing ability, resistance to oxidative stress and chemotactic response.
title_sort plant-adapted escherichia coli show increased lettuce colonizing ability, resistance to oxidative stress and chemotactic response.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Escherichia coli is a widespread gut commensal and often a versatile pathogen of public health concern. E. coli are also frequently found in different environments and/or alternative secondary hosts, such as plant tissues. The lifestyle of E. coli in plants is poorly understood and has potential implications for food safety.This work shows that a human commensal strain of E. coli K12 readily colonizes lettuce seedlings and produces large microcolony-like cell aggregates in leaves, especially in young leaves, in proximity to the vascular tissue. Our observations strongly suggest that those cell aggregates arise from multiplication of single bacterial cells that reach those spots. We showed that E. coli isolated from colonized leaves progressively colonize lettuce seedlings to higher titers, suggesting a fast adaptation process. E. coli cells isolated from leaves presented a dramatic rise in tolerance to oxidative stress and became more chemotactic responsive towards lettuce leaf extracts. Mutant strains impaired in their chemotactic response were less efficient lettuce colonizers than the chemotactic isogenic strain. However, acclimation to oxidative stress and/or minimal medium alone failed to prime E. coli cells for enhanced lettuce colonization efficiency.These findings help to understand the physiological adaptation during the alternative lifestyle of E. coli in/on plant tissues.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4196987?pdf=render
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AT linalett plantadaptedescherichiacolishowincreasedlettucecolonizingabilityresistancetooxidativestressandchemotacticresponse
AT leonardocuratti plantadaptedescherichiacolishowincreasedlettucecolonizingabilityresistancetooxidativestressandchemotacticresponse
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