Common virulence factors for bacterial pathogenicity in plants and animals
- PMID: 7604262
- DOI: 10.1126/science.7604262
Common virulence factors for bacterial pathogenicity in plants and animals
Abstract
A Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain (UCBPP-PA14) is infectious both in an Arabidopsis thaliana leaf infiltration model and in a mouse full-thickness skin burn model. UCBPP-PA14 exhibits ecotype specificity for Arabidopsis, causing a range of symptoms from none to severe in four different ecotypes. In the mouse model, UCBPP-PA14 is as lethal as other well-studied P. aeruginosa strains. Mutations in the UCBPP-PA14 toxA, plcS, and gacA genes resulted in a significant reduction in pathogenicity in both hosts, indicating that these genes encode virulence factors required for the full expression of pathogenicity in both plants and animals.
Comment in
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Bacterial virulence genes lead double life.Science. 1995 Jun 30;268(5219):1850. doi: 10.1126/science.7604256. Science. 1995. PMID: 7604256 No abstract available.
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