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Pseudomonas syringae Increases Water Availability in Leaf Microenvironments via Production of Hygroscopic Syringafactin.

Abstract

The epiphytic bacterium Pseudomonas syringae strain B728a produces the biosurfactant syringafactin, which is hygroscopic. The water-absorbing potential of syringafactin is high. Syringafactin attracts 250% of its weight in water at high relative humidities but is less hygroscopic at lower relative humidities. This finding suggests that the benefit of syringafactin to the producing cells is strongly context dependent. The contribution of syringafactin to the water availability around cells on different matrices was assessed by examining the water stress exhibited by biosensor strains expressing gfp via the water-stress-activated proU promoter. Wild-type cells exhibited significantly less green fluorescent protein (GFP) fluorescence than a syringafactin-deficient strain on dry filters in atmospheres of high water saturation, as well as on leaf surfaces, indicating greater water availability. When infiltrated into the leaf apoplast, wild-type cells also subsequently exhibited less GFP fluorescence than the syringafactin-deficient strain. These results suggest that the apoplast is a dry but humid environment and that, just as on dry but humid leaf surfaces, syringafactin increases liquid water availability and reduces the water stress experienced by P. syringaeIMPORTANCE Many microorganisms, including the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae, produce amphiphilic compounds known as biosurfactants. While biosurfactants are known to disperse hydrophobic compounds and to reduce water tension, they have other properties that can benefit the cells that produce them. Leaf-colonizing bacteria experience frequent water stress, since liquid water is present only transiently on or in leaf sites that they colonize. The demonstration that syringafactin, a biosurfactant produced by P. syringae, is sufficiently hygroscopic to increase water availability to cells, thus relieving water stress, reveals that P. syringae can modify its local habitat both on leaf surfaces and in the leaf apoplast. Such habitat modification may be a common role for biosurfactants produced by other bacterial species that colonize habitats (such as soil) that are not always water saturated.

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