Genome study of beneficial microbe may help boost plant health

ROCKVILLE, Md - In a study expected to greatly benefit crop plants, 
scientists have deciphered the genome of a root- and seed-dwelling 
bacterium that protects plants from diseases. 

The research provides clues to better explain how the helpful 
microbe, Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf-5, naturally safeguards roots 
and seeds from infection by harmful microbes that cause plant 
diseases. The genome paper will be published in Nature Biotechnology 
and was scheduled to be posted online on June 26. 

"The genome sequence has helped us identify new chemical pathways 
that the microbe apparently uses to create what are known 
as 'secondary metabolites' – possibly including new antibiotic 
compounds," says Ian Paulsen. He led the sequencing at The Institute 
for Genomic Research (TIGR), Rockville, Md., and is the study's 
first author. 

The use of naturally-occurring, beneficial microbes such as P. 
fluorescens to control plant pathogens is called "biological 
control." That method is gaining momentum as a way to grow healthy 
plants without using synthetic fungicides. In all, about three dozen 
beneficial microbes are currently used as an environmentally-
friendly way to fight plant diseases. 

Joyce E. Loper, senior author of the genome paper and an expert on 
P. fluorescens Pf-5, predicts that the new genomic data will help 
scientists more quickly develop new ways to boost the effectiveness 
of beneficial microbes in fighting plant diseases. 

"This genomic sequence reveals previously unknown traits of P. 
fluorescens that increase its potential for biological control," 
says Loper. She is a plant pathologist with USDA's Agricultural 
Research Service (ARS) and is based at Oregon State University, 
Corvallis. The P. fluorescens genome was sequenced at TIGR and 
analyzed by scientists there and at ARS and Oregon State University, 
with contributions by researchers at Rutgers, Washington State 
University and the University of Arizona. The project was funded by 
a grant from the USDA's Cooperative State Research, Education and 
Extension Service. 

The article in Nature Biotechnology presents the first complete 
genome sequence of a biological control agent for combating plant 
diseases. 

P. fluorescens Pf-5 was discovered two decades ago by Charles R. 
Howell, a plant pathologist with the ARS in Texas, who showed that 
the microbe suppressed two major cotton diseases. Since then, plant 
pathologists around the world have used this strain as a laboratory 
model to study beneficial microbes. 

Paulsen says the P. fluorescens project also pioneered a new 
methodology. This novel approach relies on the analysis of repeated 
regions of the DNA sequence to help identify segments of the genome 
that appear to have been transferred from other microbes or viruses, 
known as phages, that infect bacteria. 

Says Paulsen: "We found exciting evidence that P. fluorescens may 
have acquired new clusters of genes, called genomic islands, by 
means of lateral transfer from phages or other microbes." 


###
The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) is a not-for-profit 
research institute based in Rockville, Maryland. TIGR, which 
sequenced the first complete genome of a free-living organism in 
1995, has been at the forefront of the genomic revolution since the 
institute was founded in 1992. TIGR conducts research involving the 
structural, functional, and comparative analysis of genomes and gene 
products in viruses, bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes. 

As the principal in-house research arm of the U.S. Department of 
Agriculture, the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) conducts 
research to develop and transfer solutions to agricultural problems 
of high national priority and provides information access and 
dissemination to ensure high-quality, safe food and other 
agricultural products, assess the nutritional needs of Americans, 
sustain a competitive agricultural economy, enhance the natural 
resource base and the environment, and provide economic 
opportunities for rural citizens, communities, and society as a 
whole. 

Oregon State University is known nationally and internationally for 
the quality of its academic programs, its research excellence and 
its service and outreach. OSU is one of only two universities in the 
nation that are designated land grant, sea grant, space grant and 
sun grant institutions. 


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