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Creators/Authors contains: "Nwokocha, George C"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 16, 2026
  2. O'Toole, George (Ed.)
    ABSTRACT Bacterial plant pathogens adjust their gene expression programs in response to environmental signals and host-derived compounds. This ensures that virulence genes or genes encoding proteins, which promote bacterial fitness in a host environment, are expressed only when needed. Such regulation is in the purview of transcription factors, many of which belong to the ubiquitous multiple antibiotic resistance regulator (MarR) protein family. PecS proteins constitute a subset of this large protein family. PecS has likely been distributed by horizontal gene transfer, along with the divergently encoded efflux pump PecM, suggesting its integration into existing gene regulatory networks. Here, we discuss the roles of PecS in the regulation of genes associated with virulence and fitness of bacterial plant pathogens. A comparison of phenotypes and differential gene expression associated with the disruption of pecS shows that functional consequences of PecS integration into existing transcriptional networks are highly variable, resulting in distinct PecS regulons. Although PecS universally binds to the pecS-pecM intergenic region to repress the expression of both genes, binding modes differ. A particularly relaxed sequence preference appears to apply for Dickeya dadantii PecS, perhaps to optimize its integration as a global regulator and regulate genes ancestral to the acquisition of pecS-pecM. Even inducing ligands for PecS are not universally conserved. It appears that PecS function has been optimized to match the unique regulatory needs of individual bacterial species and that its roles must be appreciated in the context of the regulatory networks into which it was recruited. 
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  3. Becker, Anke (Ed.)
    ABSTRACT The transcriptional regulator PecS is encoded by select bacterial pathogens. For instance, in the plant pathogen Dickeya dadantii , PecS controls a range of virulence genes, including pectinase genes and the divergently oriented gene pecM , which encodes an efflux pump through which the antioxidant indigoidine is exported. In the plant pathogen Agrobacterium fabrum (formerly named Agrobacterium tumefaciens ), the pecS-pecM locus is conserved. Using a strain of A. fabrum in which pecS has been disrupted, we show here that PecS controls a range of phenotypes that are associated with bacterial fitness. PecS represses flagellar motility and chemotaxis, which are processes that are important for A. fabrum to reach plant wound sites. Biofilm formation and microaerobic survival are reduced in the pecS disruption strain, whereas the production of acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) and resistance to reactive oxygen species (ROS) are increased when pecS is disrupted. AHL production and resistance to ROS are expected to be particularly relevant in the host environment. We also show that PecS does not participate in the induction of vir genes. The inducing ligands for PecS, urate, and xanthine, may be found in the rhizosphere, and they accumulate within the plant host upon infection. Therefore, our data suggest that PecS mediates A. fabrum fitness during its transition from the rhizosphere to the host plant. IMPORTANCE PecS is a transcription factor that is conserved in several pathogenic bacteria, where it regulates virulence genes. The plant pathogen Agrobacterium fabrum is important not only for its induction of crown galls in susceptible plants but also for its role as a tool in the genetic manipulation of host plants. We show here that A. fabrum PecS controls a range of phenotypes, which would confer the bacteria an advantage while transitioning from the rhizosphere to the host plant. This includes the production of signaling molecules, which are critical for the propagation of the tumor-inducing plasmid. A more complete understanding of the infection process may inform approaches by which to treat infections as well as to facilitate the transformation of recalcitrant plant species. 
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