An enterotoxin-like binary protein from Pseudomonas protegens with potent nematicidal activity

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Abstract

Soil microbes are a major food source for free-living soil nematodes. It is known that certain soil bacteria have evolved systems to combat predation. We identified the nematode-antagonistic Pseudomonas protegens strain 15G2 from screening of microbes. Through protein purification we identified a binary protein, designated Pp- ANP, which is responsible for the nematicidal activity. This binary protein inhibits Caenorhabditis elegans growth and development by arresting larvae at the L1 stage and killing older-staged worms. The two subunits, Pp-ANP1a and Pp-ANP2a, are active when reconstituted from separate expression in Escherichia coli. The binary toxin also shows strong nematicidal activity against three other free-living nematodes (Pristionchus pacificus, Panagrellus redivivus, and Acrobeloides sp.), but we did not find any activity against insects and fungi under test conditions, indicating specificity for nematodes. Pp-ANP1a has no significant identity to any known proteins, while Pp-ANP2a shows ~30% identity to E. coli heat-labile enterotoxin (LT) subunit A and cholera toxin (CT) subunit A. Protein modeling indicates that Pp-ANP2a is structurally similar to CT/LT and likely acts as an ADPribosyltransferase. Despite the similarity, Pp-ANP shows several characteristics distinct from CT/LT toxins. Our results indicate that Pp-ANP is a new enterotoxin-like binary toxin with potent and specific activity to nematodes. The potency and specificity of Pp- ANP suggest applications in controlling parasitic nematodes and open an avenue for further research on its mechanism of action and role in bacterium-nematode interaction.

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APA

Wei, J. Z., Siehl, D. L., Hou, Z., Rosen, B., Oral, J., Taylor, C. G., & Wu, G. (2017). An enterotoxin-like binary protein from Pseudomonas protegens with potent nematicidal activity. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 83(19). https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00942-17

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