Search results for "Pseudomonas chlororaphis"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

Insect pathogenicity in plant-beneficial pseudomonads: phylogenetic distribution and comparative genomics

2016

Bacteria of the genus Pseudomonas occupy diverse environments. The Pseudomonas fluorescens group is particularly well-known for its plant-beneficial properties including pathogen suppression. Recent observations that some strains of this group also cause lethal infections in insect larvae, however, point to a more versatile ecology of these bacteria. We show that 26 P. fluorescens group strains, isolated from three continents and covering three phylogenetically distinct sub-clades, exhibited different activities toward lepidopteran larvae, ranging from lethal to avirulent. All strains of sub-clade 1, which includes Pseudomonas chlororaphis and Pseudomonas protegens, were highly insecticidal…

0301 basic medicineBioinformaticsVirulencePseudomonas fluorescensBiologyMicrobiologyHost SpecificityMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesPseudomonas protegensMicrobial ecologyPhylogeneticsPseudomonasAnimalsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyComparative genomicsGenomeVirulencePseudomonasfungiGenomics570: BiologiePlantsPseudomonas chlororaphisbiology.organism_classification3. Good healthLepidoptera030104 developmental biologyLarvainternationalOriginal Article
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2017

Particular groups of plant-beneficial fluorescent pseudomonads are not only root colonizers that provide plant disease suppression, but in addition are able to infect and kill insect larvae. The mechanisms by which the bacteria manage to infest this alternative host, to overcome its immune system, and to ultimately kill the insect are still largely unknown. However, the investigation of the few virulence factors discovered so far, points to a highly multifactorial nature of insecticidal activity. Antimicrobial compounds produced by fluorescent pseudomonads are effective weapons against a vast diversity of organisms such as fungi, oomycetes, nematodes, and protozoa. Here, we investigated whe…

0301 basic medicineMicrobiology (medical)biologyfungiPseudomonasVirulencePseudomonas fluorescensAntimicrobialbiology.organism_classificationPseudomonas chlororaphisMicrobiologyPlant disease3. Good healthMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesPyrrolnitrinchemistry.chemical_compoundPseudomonas protegens030104 developmental biologychemistryFrontiers in Microbiology
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Antimicrobial and Insecticidal: Cyclic Lipopeptides and Hydrogen Cyanide Produced by Plant-Beneficial Pseudomonas Strains CHA0, CMR12a, and PCL1391 C…

2017

Particular groups of plant-beneficial fluorescent pseudomonads are not only root colonizers that provide plant disease suppression, but in addition are able to infect and kill insect larvae. The mechanisms by which the bacteria manage to infest this alternative host, to overcome its immune system, and to ultimately kill the insect are still largely unknown. However, the investigation of the few virulence factors discovered so far, points to a highly multifactorial nature of insecticidal activity. Antimicrobial compounds produced by fluorescent pseudomonads are effective weapons against a vast diversity of organisms such as fungi, oomycetes, nematodes, and protozoa. Here, we investigated whe…

Gac regulatory systemPAENIBACILLUS-LARVAEsecondary metabolitesfungiPseudomonas protegensBiology and Life SciencesBLACK ROOT-ROTPseudomonas chlororaphisPseudomonas fluorescensMicrobiologyinsecticidal activityBIOCONTROLsessilinorfamide; sessilin; Gac regulatory system; Pseudomonas fluorescens; Pseudomonas protegens; Pseudomonas chlororaphis; secondary metabolites; insecticidal activityDROSOPHILA-MELANOGASTERorfamideFLUORESCENS CHA0GRAM-NEGATIVE BACTERIAGNOTOBIOTIC CONDITIONSENHANCED ANTIBIOTIC PRODUCTIONBIOLOGICAL-CONTROLOriginal Research
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Levansucrases from Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato and P. chlororaphis subsp. aurantiaca: Substrate specificity, polymerizing properties and usage of…

2011

Levansucrases of Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato DC3000 (Lsc3) and Pseudomonas chlororaphis subsp. aurantiaca (also Pseudomonas aurantiaca) (LscA) have 73% identity of protein sequences, similar substrate specificity and kinetic properties. Both enzymes produce levan and fructooligosaccharides (FOS) of varied length from sucrose, raffinose and sugar beet molasses. A novel high-throughput chip-based nanoelectrospray mass spectrometric method was applied to screen alternative fructosyl acceptors for levansucrases. Lsc3 and LscA could both transfructosylate D-xylose, D-fucose, L- and D-arabinose, D-ribose, D-sorbitol, xylitol, xylobiose, D-mannitol, D-galacturonic acid and methyl-α-D-glucopyra…

Spectrometry Mass Electrospray IonizationSucroseRecombinant Fusion ProteinsMolecular Sequence DataPseudomonas syringaeBioengineeringFructoseXylitolApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologySubstrate SpecificityStructure-Activity Relationshipchemistry.chemical_compoundRaffinoseBacterial ProteinsPseudomonasPseudomonas aurantiacaPseudomonas syringaeXylobioseHistidineAmino Acid SequenceRaffinoseHistidinebiologySubstrate (chemistry)General Medicinebiology.organism_classificationPseudomonas chlororaphisFructansHexosyltransferaseschemistryBiochemistryMutagenesis Site-DirectedChromatography Thin LayerOligopeptidesSequence AlignmentBiotechnologyJournal of Biotechnology
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Data from: Evolution of bacterial life history traits is sensitive to community structure

2016

Very few studies have experimentally assessed the evolutionary effects of species interactions within the same trophic level. Here we show that when Serratia marcescens evolve in multispecies communities, their growth rate exceeds the growth rate of the bacteria that evolved alone, whereas the biomass yield gets lower. In addition to the community effects per se, we found that few species in the communities caused strong effects on S. marcescens evolution. The results indicate that evolutionary responses (of a focal species) are different in communities, compared to species evolving alone. Moreover, selection can lead to very different outcomes depending on the community structure. Such con…

medicine and health careNovosophingobium capsulatumPseudomonas putidaLife SciencesMedicineEnterobacter aerogenesPseudomonas chlororaphisSerratia marcescensLeclercia adecarboxylata
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Data from: Propagule pressure increase and phylogenetic diversity decrease community’s susceptibility to invasion

2017

Invasions pose a large threat to native species, but the question of why some species are more invasive, and some communities more prone to invasions than others, is far from solved. Using ten different three-species bacterial communities, we tested experimentally if the phylogenetic relationships between an invader and a resident community and propagule pressure affect invasion probability. We found that greater diversity in phylogenetic distances between the resident community members and the invader lowered invasion success, and higher propagule pressure increased invasion success whereas phylogenetic distance had no clear effect. In the later stages of invasion phylogenetic diversity ha…

medicine and health carePseudomonas putidaphylogenetic similarity and propagule pressureLife SciencesMedicinephylogenetic distanceEnterobacter aerogenesPseudomonas chlororaphisSerratia marcescensLeclercia adecarboxylata
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