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Keywords
Cell division, chromosome segregation, citrus
canker, thermal stress
Correspondence
Henrique Ferreira, Depto. Bioqumica e
Microbiologia, Instituto de Biocincias,
Universidade Estadual Paulista, Av. 24A 1515,
Rio Claro, SP 13506-900, Brazil. Tel: +55 19
3526 4187; Fax: +55 19 3534 0903; E-mail:
henrique.ferreira@linacre.oxon.org
Funding Information
Fundao de Amparo Pesquisa do Estado
de So Paulo [grant numbers
FAPESP-2004/09173-6, 2013/14013-7, and
2013/50367-8]
Received: 30 July 2015; Revised: 2 November
2015; Accepted: 6 November 2015
doi: 10.1002/mbo3.323
aThese
work.
Abstract
Citrus canker is an economically important disease that affects orange production
in some of the most important producing areas around the world. It represents
a great threat to the Brazilian and North American citriculture, particularly to
the states of So Paulo and Florida, which together correspond to the biggest
orange juice producers in the world. The etiological agent of this disease is the
Gram-negative bacterium Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri (Xcc), which grows
optimally in laboratory cultures at ~30C. To investigate how temperatures
differing from 30C influence the development of Xcc, we subjected the bacterium
to thermal stresses, and afterward scored its recovery capability. In addition,
we analyzed cell morphology and some markers of essential cellular processes
that could indicate the extent of the heat-induced damage. We found that the
exposure of Xcc to 37C for a period of 6h led to a cell cycle arrest at the
division stage. Thermal stress might have also interfered with the DNA replication
and/or the chromosome segregation apparatuses, since cells displayed an increased
number of sister origins side-by-side within rods. Additionally, Xcc treated at
37C was still able to induce citrus canker symptoms, showing that thermal
stress did not affect the ability of Xcc to colonize the host citrus. At 4042C,
Xcc lost viability and became unable to induce disease symptoms in citrus. Our
results provide evidence about essential cellular mechanisms perturbed by
temperature, and can be potentially explored as a new method for Xanthomonas
citri synchronization in cell cycle studies, as well as for the sanitation of plant
material.
Introduction
Bacterial cell cycle synchronization is useful in the isolation of subgroups of cells within a culture exhibiting
different morphologies and/or physiological behaviors.
Among the techniques employed to obtain synchronization, centrifugation gradients have been widely explored
in Caulobacter crescentus (Schrader and Shapiro 2015),
a bacterial model for cell cycle and differentiation studies. This is probably the less disturbing method used
since it does not require any specific cell lineage or
mutant to be applied, and it allows the isolation of large
amounts of cells (Lin etal. 2012; Schrader and Shapiro
2015). Synchronization can also be obtained by immobilizing cells onto solid surfaces followed by the rescue
of the newborn cells that emerge after division
2015 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use,
distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
J. A. P. Sumares etal.
Growth curves
A permanent culture of wild-
type Xcc was activated in
NYG-
agar plate for 48h at 30C. After growth, isolated
colonies were restreaked on the same medium and incubated for further 48h in order to produce biomass. A
bacterial suspension to be used as inoculum was prepared
by dissolving Xcc biomass from the second growth in 50mL
of NYG-medium using a polypropylene tube. The OD600nm
of the cell suspension was determined using a
Spectrophotometer DU-730 (Beckman Coulter), and cells
were used to inoculate six 125mL Erlenmeyer flasks containing 50mL NYG-medium so to give a starting OD600nm
of ~0.01. Cultures were initially incubated at 30C and
agitated at 200rpm in a refrigerated rotary shaker (Innova
4230; New Brunswick Scientific, Edison, NJ). When cultures
reached the OD600nm of ~0.4, which pilot experiments
indicated to be the beginning of the exponential phase
(generally after 12h of growth), three flasks were kept at
30C to serve as a control; the remaining three flasks were
then transferred to another refrigerated shaker (ProBlot
12S; Labnet, Edison, NJ.), previously equilibrated at one
of the testing temperatures (20, 37, 40, 42 or 45C). The
cultures were exposed to a thermal stress of 6h (a period
equivalent to three doubling times of Xcc) under agitation
(200rpm). At the end of the shift, the flasks were returned
to the 30C incubator. OD600nm measures were taken every
6h from the start of the thermal stress, until all cultures
reached the decline phase (36h). Viable cells (CFU/mL)
were calculated by serial dilution and plating on NYG-agar.
Three independent experiments were conducted for each
temperature to be tested. The temperatures inside the incubation chambers were monitored using a mercury thermometer immersed in 100mL of water contained in a
125mL Erlenmeyer flask, to mimic the culture flasks.
2015 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
J. A. P. Sumares etal.
Microscopy
Wild-type Xcc, and the mutants Xcc amy::pPM2a-zapA and
Xcc parB::pAPU3 were cultivated as described in the growth
curve section. Six flasks were prepared for each strain to
be tested and when the cultures reached the OD600nm of
~0.4, three flasks were subjected to a 6h temperature shift
at 20C, 37C, 40C, 42C, or 45C, while the remaining
three flasks were kept at 30C to serve as internal experimental control. Right at the end of the shifts, three slides
were prepared, one for each of the triplicates, for microscope
analyses (20L of cell culture were dropped onto 1X PBS/1%
agarose-
covered slides). Cells were visualized in the magnification of 100 using an Olympus BX-
61 microscope
equipped with an orca-
flash2.8 camera (Hamamatsu,
Higashi-ku, Hamamatsu City, Japan). Images were captured
and processed using the software CellSens Dimension ver.
11 (Olympus Latin America, INC., Miami, Florida, USA).
Pathogenicity tests
The plant host used in the pathogenicity tests was the sweet
orange Natal [Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck]. Citrus plants were
cultivated under greenhouse conditions at 2535C. Xcc cells
were cultivated in NYG-medium until the OD600nm of ~0.4
(108CFU/mL), being subsequently subjected to thermal stress
as described in the growth curve section. As soon as the
time limit for the thermal stress finished, cell cultures were
diluted 1000 in saline and inoculated by infiltration on
the abaxial surface of leaves using needleless 1mL syringes.
Symptoms were observed over the course of 3weeks.
Data analysis
The average cell length for each thermal stress treatment
(20, 37, 40, 42, and 45C) was calculated by measuring
at least 200 cells per treatment. Controls at 30C were
run alongside each treatment to minimize environmental
fluctuations and 200 cells were also measured to determine
the average cell length for each control. The effect of each
thermal stress was determined by comparing the averages
of cell length of the treated cells with its internal control
(kept at 30C) applying the t-test of Student (P 0.05).
Growth curves for Xcc and t-test analyses were conducted
using GraphPad-Prism 6 (La Jolla, CA, USA).
Results
Temperature influence over the growth of
Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri
In order to investigate the effects of temperature shifts
on the physiology of Xcc, we subjected the bacterium to
2015 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
20C
30C
37C
40C
42C
45C
1Colony-forming
2Standard
unit.
deviation.
Regarding the highest temperature tested in our experiments, no cells could be rescued on the plate after exposure
of cultures to 45C, corroborating the drop in OD600nm
values observed during the thermal stress.
To study the behavior of growth of Xcc after the thermal stresses, cultures were returned to 30C and monitored
for further 18h (Fig.1, from 18h to 36h). For the
cultures treated at 20C, we noticed only a retardation
of growth during the stress period (Fig.1; compare the
blue and yellow lines in the interval between 1224h),
since these cultures were able to resume growth to similar
extents as the control, reaching very close OD600nm values
at 24h. In both situations (control and 20C), the cultures
displayed a short stationary phase around 24h, and entered
the death phase together at the same time point (24h).
Xcc cells exposed to 37C were not able to reach the
same OD600nm values as the control (compare the reads
at the peak of 24h), and in addition, they displayed a
prolonged stationary phase from 2430h. In the cultures
submitted at 40C, the exponential phase was apparently
prolonged, with a short stationary phase around 30h
before reaching the decline phase. Finally, at the highest
temperatures tested, growth could not be resumed after
the stress, and in fact, cultures entered the death phase
right at the end of the thermal stress (42C), or even
during the shift (45C).
J. A. P. Sumares etal.
2015 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
J. A. P. Sumares etal.
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
(F)
Figure2. Cell morphology of Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri (Xcc) cultivated at different temperatures. Xcc was cultivated as described in Figure1.
After the thermal stress, cell samples were analyzed by phase contrast microscopy. Magnification 100; bar=4m.
in cellular division leading to the accumulation of replicated origins per cell. Finally, the typical ParB-GFP pattern
could not be detected in cells treated at 40 and 42C
(Fig.3H and J). Here, only diffuse fluorescence was observed, which indicates that the bacterial centromere has
been dissolved.
To further characterize if temperature was really delaying
cell division, we analyzed a mutant strain of Xcc labeled
for the septum in a similar set of experiments. Xcc
amy::pPM2a-zapA expresses GFP-
ZapA, a protein that
associates with the cell division factor FtsZ allowing the
2015 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
37C (Fig.4B, D, and F, arrows). However, the three cultures differed in the proportion of the cells displaying the
divisional septum. For the cultures subjected to 20C or
kept at 30C, ~30% (n=400) of the cells were dividing
(with visible septa), while nearly all the cells had a visible
septum after incubation at 37C (Fig.4, compare panels
4B, D, and F, and Figure S1). The proportion of cells with
septa labeled after the thermal stress at 20C and in the
control reflect nonsynchronized cultures in which the sub-
populations of cells are in fact dividing. Remarkably, thermal
stress at 37C produced an arrest in cell division, which
suggests synchronization. Thermal stresses at 40 and 42C
led to a complete loss of the septal structures, where the
fluorescence of GFP-
ZapA seemed delocalized within the
cells (Fig.4H and J).
5
Table2. Cellular length of Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri (Xcc) cultivated at different temperatures.
20C
37C
40C
42C
45C
Treatment
Control2
Treatment
Control
Treatment
Control
Treatment
Control
Treatment
Control
Minimum
(m)
Maximum
(m)
Mean (m)SD
1.02
0.92
1.34
0.75
1.16
1.03
1.14
1.05
1.09
0.93
2.72
2.08
3.59
2.22
3.81
3.05
2.91
2.99
2.68
2.38
1.8020.2851
1.3730.212
2.2080.4111
1.3790.295
2.0690.4411
1.6060.297
1.8360.3541
1.6810.362
1.7820.3281
1.5120.293
Average cell length for each treatment was acquired measuring at least
200 cells (n=200).
1Averages from the treatments differed significantly from the averages
of their respective controls (t test of Student; P<0.05).
2Controls were run alongside each treatment at 30C to minimize environmental fluctuations.
Discussion
Considering that Xcc spends part of its life cycle as an
epiphyte, bacterium has to deal with environmental temperature oscillations that are quite different from the
optimum cultivation temperature used in the laboratory
(2830C). By investigating the effects of thermal stress
for periods of 6h on the growth of Xcc, we observed:
first, the cell cycle is arrested at division when the bacterium is exposed to 37C, and in addition, the cell
6
J. A. P. Sumares etal.
2015 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
J. A. P. Sumares etal.
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
(F)
(G)
(H)
(I)
(J)
Figure3. The influence of temperature on the centromere of Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri (Xcc). The Xcc parB::pAPU3 mutant, expressing ParB-GFP,
was cultivated in NYG-medium at 30C until the OD600nm of ~0.4; cultures were transferred to different temperatures as indicated, and thermal stress
was carried out for a period of 6h. Cells were visualized immediately after the shifts. Panels: AB) 30C, CD) 20C, EF) 37C, GH) 40C, and IJ)
42C; (PhC) phase contrast microscopy and (GFP, green fluorescent protein) fluorescence microscopy. Magnification 100; bar=4m.
2015 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
J. A. P. Sumares etal.
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
(F)
(G)
(H)
(I)
(J)
Figure4. Temperature shifts induce cell division arrest in Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri (Xcc). The Xcc amy::pPM2a-zapA mutant strain, expressing
GFP-ZapA, was cultivated in NYG-medium at 30C until the OD600nm of ~0.4; cultures were transferred to different temperatures as indicated, and
thermal stress was carried out for a period of 6h. Cells were visualized by (PhC) phase contrast microscopy and (GFP, green fluorescent protein)
fluorescence microscopy immediately after the shifts. Panels: AB) 30C, CD) 20C, EF) 37C, GH) 40C, and IJ) 42C. Magnification 100;
bar=4m.
2015 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
J. A. P. Sumares etal.
Figure5. Ability to induce disease in citrus after thermal stress. Wild-type Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri (Xcc) was cultivated and subjected to different
temperature shifts as described in Figure1. After the thermal stress, the cell concentration was adjusted to 104CFU/mL, and Xcc suspensions were
infiltrated in leaves of sweet orange Natal; here we show a representative experiment. Analyses were done in triplicate. NYG=NYG-medium.
2015 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Acknowledgments
We thank Dr. Franklin Behlau for helpful discussions and
FUNDECITRUS for supplying the green house in which
the plant tests were conducted. This work was supported
by Fundao de Amparo Pesquisa do Estado de So
Paulo [grant numbers FAPESP-2004/09173-6, 2013/14013-7,
and 2013/50367-
8]. JAPS, LGM, andPMMM received
scholarships from CAPES and CNPq.
Conflict of Interest
None declared.
References
Anco, D. J., G. H. Poole, and T. R. Gottwald. 2014. Effects
of postharvest treatments on recovery of Xanthomonas
citri subsp. citri in infected grapefruit leaves. Crop Prot.
62:115123.
10
J. A. P. Sumares etal.
Supporting Information
Additional supporting information may be found in the
online version of this article:
Figure S1. Thermal stress induces cell division arrest
in Xcc.
2015 The Authors. MicrobiologyOpen published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.