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Research The xylan utilization system of the plant pathogen Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris controls epiphytic life and reveals common features with oligotrophic bacteria and animal gut symbionts Guillaume Dejean1,2*, Servane Blanvillain-Baufume1,2*, Alice Boulanger1,2, Armelle Darrasse3, Thomas Duge de Bernonville1,2, Anne-Laure Girard3, Sebastien Carrere1,2, Stevie Jamet1,2, Claudine Zischek1,2, Martine Lautier1,2,4, uttner5, Marie-Agnes Jacques3, Emmanuelle Lauber1,2 and Matthieu Arlat1,2,4 Magali Sole5, Daniela B€ 1 INRA, Laboratoire des Interactions Plantes–Microorganismes (LIPM), UMR441, F-31326, Castanet-Tolosan, France; 2CNRS, Laboratoire des Interactions Plantes–Microorganismes (LIPM), UMR2594, F-31326, Castanet-Tolosan, France; 3INRA, UMR 1345, Institut de Recherche en Horticulture et Semences (IRHS), 42 rue Georges Morel, 49071, Beaucouze CEDEX 01, France; 4 Universite de Toulouse, Universite Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France; 5Institut f€ur Biologie, Bereich Genetik, Martin-Luther-Universit€at Halle-Wittenberg, D–06099, Halle (Saale), Germany Summary Author for correspondence: Matthieu Arlat Tel: +33 561 285 047 Email: [email protected] Received: 7 December 2012 Accepted: 9 January 2013 New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 doi: 10.1111/nph.12187 Key words: epiphytic, gut symbiont, oligotrophy, TonB-dependent transporter, transport, xylan, xylanase. Xylan is a major structural component of plant cell wall and the second most abundant plant polysaccharide in nature. Here, by combining genomic and functional analyses, we provide a comprehensive picture of xylan utilization by Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris (Xcc) and highlight its role in the adaptation of this epiphytic phytopathogen to the phyllosphere. The xylanolytic activity of Xcc depends on xylan-deconstruction enzymes but also on transporters, including two TonB-dependent outer membrane transporters (TBDTs) which belong to operons necessary for efficient growth in the presence of xylo-oligosaccharides and for optimal survival on plant leaves. Genes of this xylan utilization system are specifically induced by xylo-oligosaccharides and repressed by a LacI-family regulator named XylR. Part of the xylanolytic machinery of Xcc, including TBDT genes, displays a high degree of conservation with the xylose-regulon of the oligotrophic aquatic bacterium Caulobacter crescentus. Moreover, it shares common features, including the presence of TBDTs, with the xylan utilization systems of Bacteroides ovatus and Prevotella bryantii, two gut symbionts. These similarities and our results support an important role for TBDTs and xylan utilization systems for bacterial adaptation in the phyllosphere, oligotrophic environments and animal guts. Introduction Xylans represent the predominant hemicelluloses in the cell wall of terrestrial plants. They comprise a conserved backbone composed of 1,4-linked b-D-xylose residues which may be substituted with glucuronic acid, 4-O-methyl-glucuronic acid, arabinose or a combination of types of decorations (Burton et al., 2010; Scheller & Ulvskov, 2010; Fig. 1a). Altogether, xylans account for approximately one-third of all renewable organic carbon on earth. They therefore represent a substantial source of nutriment and many bacteria are able to degrade this hemicellulolytic substrate (Kulkarni et al., 1999; Saha, 2003; Dodd & Cann, 2009). These xylanolytic microbes can be found in diverse ecological niches, which typically comprise environments where plant material accumulates and deteriorates, including plant debris, soil, aquatic environments and the digestive tract of animals *These authors contributed equally to this work. Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust (Collins et al., 2005). Plant pathogenic bacteria also display xylanolytic activities, which may help them to breach the cell wall obstacle and to release nutrients during the colonization of plants. Bioconversion of xylans has been intensively studied in the past decade because of its potential applications in agro-industrial processes, such as the pulp and paper industry and biofuel production. These studies have shown that xylan bioconversion is mediated by a wide array of enzymes (Collins et al., 2005; Dodd & Cann, 2009). Although the xylanolytic systems of bacteria isolated from soil or from digestive tracts of animals have been studied in detail, there is only limited information regarding the xylanolytic systems of plant pathogenic bacteria. Moreover, little is known about transport into bacterial cells of xylan deconstruction products. The Xanthomonas genus comprises an important group of plant pathogenic bacteria that together affect c. 400 plant hosts, including agronomically important crops (Buttner & Bonas, 2009; Ryan et al., 2011). Most Xanthomonas species are able to survive on the aerial part of plants (phyllosphere), a feature that New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 899 www.newphytologist.com New Phytologist 900 Research β-Xylosidase (a) 4-O-methyl-glucuronic acid – OOC H3CO HO O HO O GH67 XCC4102 XCC1283 XCC1404 XCC1775 XCC2892 XCC3814 XCC4106 XCC0149 XCC1178 XCC4064 XCC4105 XCC4122 XCC3975 Acetate O O O OH O OH O HO GH39 β-D-Xylose O H3CO GH43 H 3C OH O α-Glucuronidase GH3 O GH43 GH51 XCC0149 XCC1178 XCC4064 XCC4105 XCC4122 XCC1191 XCC1759 xylB xylA1 xylE Xylose isomerase D-xylose n GH30 XCC4115 XCC4118 XCC0857 xytA locus (c) D-xylulokinase O Xylanase Arabinofuranosidase XCC1757 XCC4103 O GH10 α-L-Arabinose (b) xylE locus Acetyl xylan esterase O HO O OH Ferulic acid O XCC2825 xyaC XCC2828 xyaB xyaA xytA Tryptophan Hyp Hyp halogenase protein protein transporter TonB-dependent Transporter (d) xylR locus XCC4100 xylA2 XCC4107 GH67 agu67A xylR axeXA Xylose LacI α-Glucuronidase isomerase repressor Acetyl esterase uxuA GH43 gly43E GH3 xyl3A Mannonate β-Xylosidase/ dehydratase arabinosidase uxuB β-Xylosidase Fructuronate reductase (e) xytB locus XCC4115 GH10 XCC4122 G H2 xyn10C gly2A Xylanase Glycosyl hydrolase GH10 uxaC xyn10A GH43 xypA Glucuronate Xylanase MFS isomerase transporter xytB TonB-dependent Transporter plays an important role in the early stages of infection (Rigano et al., 2007; Li & Wang, 2011). Xylanases have been shown to control the virulence of two members of this genus, Xanthomonas oryzae pv oryzae (Xoo) and Xanthomonas campestis pv vesicatoria (Xcv) (Rajeshwari et al., 2005; Szczesny et al., 2010). The aim of this study was to characterize the xylan utilization system of Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris (Xcc) the causal bacterium of black rot disease of Brassica. Xcc harbours CUT systems (Carbohydrate Utilization with TBDT systems) which are involved in plant carbohydrate scavenging (Blanvillain et al., 2007). These systems comprise inner membrane transporters, degrading enzymes, transcriptional regulators and TonB-dependent outer membrane transporters (TBDTs; Blanvillain et al., 2007). In contrast to passive transport mediated by porins, TBDTs allow high-affinity and active transport of bigger substrate molecules (Cornelis, 2010; Krewulak & Vogel, 2011). TBDTs have been New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com xypB gly43F Symporter β-Xylosidase/ transporter arabinosidase Fig. 1 General structure of xylans and putative xylan-degrading enzymes of Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris ATCC33913 (LMG568) (Xcc-568) and their genetic organization. (a) The major enzymes degrading xylan found in Xcc-568 and their sites of action are depicted with arrows. For each enzymatic activity, the corresponding families listed in the CAZy database are shown and the Xcc-568 proteins belonging to each family are listed beneath: glycosyl hydrolase (GH). Proteins belonging to Xcc568 xylan CUT system are indicated in red. (b–e) Genetic organization of Xcc-568 xylE (b), xytA (c), xylR (d), and xytB (e) loci. Genes are represented by arrows, their names and putative functions are indicated beneath. Perfect xyl-boxes are represented by white circles. Genes encoding predicted enzymatic functions are annotated according to their CAZy family number. Genes coding for enzymes involved in xylose metabolism are in yellow. Genes involved in glucuronic acid metabolism are in blue. Inner membrane transporter genes are indicated by a pink colour. TBDT genes are represented in red. Other enzymes putatively involved in xylan or xylo-oligosaccharides degradation are shown in green. shown to transport iron-siderophore complexes, vitamin B12 and, more recently, various carbohydrates (Neugebauer et al., 2005; Blanvillain et al., 2007; Eisenbeis et al., 2008; Schauer et al., 2008). A global study of Xcc ATCC33913 (LMG568) (Xcc-568) TBDT genes has shown that the expression of two of them, XCC2828 and XCC4120, is specifically induced by xylan and xylose (Blanvillain et al., 2007). In this study we show that they belong to a complex CUT system involved in the uptake and utilization of xylan. This system is important for fitness of Xcc-568 in the phyllosphere. Materials and Methods Bacterial strains, plasmids and growth conditions The Xcc-568 strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in Supporting Information Table S1. Xcc-568 cells were grown at Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust New Phytologist 28°C in MOKA rich medium (Blanvillain et al., 2007) or in minimal medium (MME; Arlat et al., 1991). Escherichia coli cells were grown on Luria–Bertani medium at 37°C. Antibiotics were used at the following concentrations: for Xcc-568, 50 lg ml 1 rifampicin, 50 lg ml 1 kanamycin, and 5 lg ml 1 tetracycline; for E. coli, 50 lg ml 1 ampicillin, 25 lg ml 1 kanamycin, and 10 lg ml 1 tetracycline. Construction of Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris mutants Insertion mutants were constructed using the suicide plasmid pVO155 (Oke & Long, 1999) with a 300- to 500-bp PCR amplicon internal to each open reading frame (ORF). Deletion mutants were constructed by using the cre-lox system adapted by Angot et al. (2006) from the system of Marx & Lidstrom (2002) or by using the sacB system (Schafer et al., 1994). Deleted regions and pVO155 plasmid insertions are indicated in Table S1 and represented on Fig. S1. Oligonucleotide primers used for PCR amplification will be provided upon request. Research 901 using the RNeasy Mini Kit (Qiagen). A total of 5 lg of RNA was reverse transcribed with Transcriptor Reverse Transcriptase enzyme (Roche Diagnostics, Meylan, France) using random hexamers (Biolabs, Evry, France) for 10 min at 25°C and then for 40 min at 55°C. The resulting cDNAs were used as a template for PCR amplification with Taq polymerase using specific primer pairs for each gene (as indicated in Fig. S2) and analysed by agarose-gel electrophoresis. Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR) experiments were performed essentially as previously described (Blanvillain et al., 2007). For qRT-PCR, experiments were performed on bacteria grown on solid medium containing 4-O-Methyl-Dglucurono-D-xylan-Remazol brilliant blue R (RBB-Xylan; Sigma), colonies obtained after 48 h growth were resuspended in 1 ml of water. A 1 lg sample of RNA was treated with RNasefree DNase I (Sigma) for 20 min at room temperature. After DNase inactivation (10 min at 70°C), RNAs were reverse transcribed as indicated above. Oligonucleotide primers used for quantitative PCR amplification will be provided upon request. 16S rRNA was used as a control for real-time PCR (Morales et al., 2005; Blanvillain et al., 2007). Plasmid constructions DNA manipulations were performed using standard procedures (Sambrook et al., 1989). For complementation studies, PCR amplicons presented in Fig. S1 (oligonucleotide primers used for PCR amplification will be provided upon request) were cloned into pCZ1016, a derivative of pFAJ1700 containing the Ptac promoter, multiple cloning sites and the T7 terminator from pSC150 (Dombrecht et al., 2001; Cunnac, 2004). To perform chromosomal complementations, PCR amplicons were cloned into pCZ1034, a derivative of pK18mobsacB (Schafer et al., 1994) with the MCS replaced by a Ptac promoter, a MCS and a T7 terminator flanked by a 700-bp fragment corresponding to the region upstream from the open reading frame XCC0127 and a 700-bp fragment corresponding to the region downstream from the open reading frame XCC0128. The XCC4120 promoter region (see Table S1) was PCR amplified with appropriately designed primers. This promoter region was cloned as HindIII–XbaI fragment, into the pCZ962 plasmid, a pFAJ1700 (Dombrecht et al., 2001) derivative containing the KpnI–AscI lacZ gene from the pCZ367 plasmid (Cunnac, 2004), giving pPr-xytB. Calculation of maximal growth rate Growth curves of Xcc-568 strains grown at 28°C in MME liquid culture in the presence of xylose or xylo-oligosaccharides were generated using a FLUOStar Omega apparatus (BMG Labtech, Offenburg, Germany) with four replicates. Growth was monitored by measuring OD600 using 96-well flat-bottom microtiter plates with 200 ll preparations inoculated at OD600 of 0.1 from four independent washed overnight precultures. The microplates were shaken continuously at 700 rpm using the linear-shaking mode. Generation time (G), defined as doubling time, was calculated during the exponential phase of growth using the following formula: G = tf t0/n where n is equal to (logNf logN0)/log2 (N0, initial number of bacteria at the initial time point considered (t0); Nf, final number of bacteria at the final time point considered (tf)). The maximum specific growth rate (lmax), defined as the increase in cell mass per time unit, was calculated as follows: lmax = ln 2/G. Statistical analysis was performed using the RGUI software (GNU General Public License; Free Software Foundation Inc., Boston, MA, USA). [14C] xylose transport experiments Expression studies, RNA isolation and operon mapping b-galactosidase and b-glucuronidase assays: bacterial cultures in the appropriate medium were harvested at different time points and b-galactosidase and b-glucuronidase (GUS) assays were performed as previously described (Blanvillain et al., 2007). In order to investigate the transcriptional organization, reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) experiments were performed. Bacterial cultures from xylR mutant of Xcc-568 grown in minimal medium (MME) were harvested after 6 h of incubation at an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.6. RNAs were extracted Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust [14C] xylose transport assays were conducted as previously described (Blanvillain et al., 2007; Boulanger et al., 2010). [14C] xylose (Amersham Biosciences, specific activity of 3.15 GBq mmol 1) was added to a final concentration of 0.5 lM. For competition experiments, unlabelled sugars were added to [14C] xylose at final concentrations of 0.5, 5, 50 and 500 lM, and cells were incubated for 1 h before collection. The initial concentration-dependent xylose transport was determined using the rapid dilution method as previously described (Neugebauer et al., 2005; Blanvillain et al., 2007). New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com 902 Research Plate assays for detection of xylanase activity The plate assay for xylanase activity was performed using MME-agar plates containing 0.1% RBB-xylan (Sigma). Overnight cultures of Xcc-568 strains grown in MOKA medium were centrifuged. Pellets were resuspended in MME medium and the OD600 was adjusted to 0.4. Five microlitres of bacterial suspension were spotted on plates that were incubated at 28°C. The detection of xylanase activity was examined periodically by checking the halo against the blue background. Pathogenicity tests Pathogenicity tests were conducted on Arabidopsis thaliana Sf-2 ecotype as previously described (Meyer et al., 2005). Dynamics of bacterial population densities in the phyllosphere of cabbage and bean Experiments on cabbage (Brassica oleracea cv Bartolo) and dry bean (Phaseolus vulgaris cv Flavert) as well as statistical analyses were performed at IRHS as previously described (Darsonval et al., 2008). In silico analyses The presence of signal peptides and protein localization were determined using the SignalP 3.0 server (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/ services/SignalP/; Emanuelsson et al., 2007). Patscan and Predetector software (Dsouza et al., 1997; Hiard et al., 2007) were used to identify xyl-boxes. Results XCC2828 and XCC4120 TBDTs genes are located in loci putatively involved in xylan/xylose metabolism The XCC2828 and XCC4120 TBDT genes, whose expression is specifically induced by xylan and xylose, display significant homologies with TBDTs genes from the aquatic bacterium Caulobacter crescentus CB15 (Cc-CB15), CC0999 and CC2832, respectively, (Fig. 2a, Table S2). Interestingly, a transcriptomic analysis showed that these two Cc-CB15 genes belong to a complex xylose regulon whose repression is mediated by CC3065, a LacI-family regulator named XylR. This repressor was shown to recognize a specific 14 bp-operator motif (Hottes et al., 2004; Stephens et al., 2007a,b; Fig. S3). This motif, found upstream from both CC0999 and CC2832 TBDT genes has several close matches in the genome of Xcc-568, two of which are located upstream from XCC2828 and XCC4120 TBDT genes (Hottes et al., 2004). The screening of the Xcc-568 genome sequence predicted two additional motifs perfectly matching the 14 bp palindromic motif, named xyl-box, located upstream from XCC2828 and XCC4120 (Table S3). One motif is located upstream from the XCC4119 gene, encoding a putative inner membrane transporter of the major facilitator superfamily (MFS) and the other New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com New Phytologist upstream from the XCC4100 gene, encoding a putative xylose isomerase (Table 1). Interestingly, several genes surrounding XCC2828, XCC4100, XCC4119 and XCC4120 genes code for proteins displaying high similarities to proteins of the xylose regulon of Cc-CB15 (Fig. 2a; Table S2). Among these proteins, XCC4101, a putative LacI family regulator, is very well conserved to XylR from Cc-CB15 and was therefore named XylR. Moreover, several genes located in these loci have predicted functions associated with the utilization of xylan, xylose or glucuronic acid (Table 1; Fig. 1). The major enzymes that attack xylan backbone are classified in the carbohydrate-active enzyme (CAZy) database (http://www.cazy.org; Cantarel et al., 2009). They comprise endo-1,4-b-D-xylanases (EC 3.2.1.8), which generate xylo-oligosaccharides (Table S4). The degradation of xylooligosaccharides is mediated by b-D-xylosidases, whereas elimination of the side groups is catalysed by a-L-arabinofuranosidases, a-D-glucuronidases, acetylxylanesterases, ferulic acid esterases and p-coumaric acid esterases (Table S4). The genes of Xcc-568 found in these different glycosyl hydrolases (GH) or carboxylesterase (CE) families were named to indicate their activity and CAZy family, as previously described for Cellvibrio japonicus (DeBoy et al., 2008) and according to the nomenclature recently proposed by Potnis et al. (2011; Table 1). This analysis allowed us to define three loci, named xytA, xytB and xylR, containing xyl-boxes and enzymes putatively associated with xylan deconstruction and glucuronic acid metabolism, as well as inner membrane transporters and TBDTs. They might therefore form a xylan CUT system (Fig. 1). Moreover, the xylR locus contains xylaA2 gene encoding a putative xylose isomerase, an enzyme which carries out the first step in xylose metabolism (Lawlis et al., 1984; Fig. 3). The analysis of the Xcc-568 proteome showed that this pathogen possesses a second xylose isomerase gene (named xylA1) which displays high similarity to xylA2 (97% identity at DNA level). xylA1 does not belong to the xylan CUT system defined above. It is located between XCC1759 (xylE) gene, encoding a putative MFS inner membrane transporter and xylB, a putative D-xylulokinase gene, thus suggesting that Xcc-568 possesses a classical two-step xylose utilization pathway (Lawlis et al., 1984; Fig. 3; Table 1). No perfect or even degenerated xyl-box was found in this locus, named xylE (Fig. 1). Genes belonging to xytA, xytB and xylR loci are specifically induced by xylo-oligosaccharides The expression of most genes located in the xytA, xytB or xylR loci was studied in the presence of xylan, xylose or xylo-oligosaccharides (xylobiose, X2; xylotriose, X3; xylotetraose, X4). These experiments were performed by using pVO155 insertion mutants which carry transcriptional fusions between the targeted genes and the uidA reporter gene (Oke & Long, 1999) or by qRT-PCR. Most genes in these three loci display a similar expression pattern: their expression is specifically and highly induced by xylo-oligosaccharides. They are also induced to a lesser extent by xylan, and xylose (Tables 2, 3). xylR regulatory gene and xypB, that code for a putative inner membrane transporter, showed distinctive expression induction. Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust New Phytologist Research 903 (a) Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris ATTCC33913 C l b t Caulobacter crescentus CB15 xylE locus xytA locus xylB xylA1 xylE xylR locus xyaC xyaB xyaA xytA xylA2 xylR agu67A 1759 2825 xytB locus uxuA gly43E PF03629 GH67 XC XCC1757 axeXA xyl3A GH43 uxuB GH3 GH10 4107 410 0 2828 xyn10C gly2A uxaC xyn10A xypA GH2 xytB xypB gly43F GH10 GH43 4115 4122 GH43 GH10 CC0814 0813 3065 xylR 0999 1002 GH67 2812 G H GH10 2811 2804 1487 GH43 1490 1508 3042 2832 2802 (b) xylE locus Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris ATTCC33913 Bacteroides ovatus ATCC8483 Prevotella bryantii B1 4 xyn30A GH30 XCC0857 GH43 Bacova_02534 02535 Bac xylR locus xylB xylA1 xylE xylA2 xylR agu67A 1757 4100 axeXA PF03629 GH67 GH3 1759 GH43 GH31 xytB locus uxuA gly43E xyl3A GH43 uxuB GH3 xyn10C gly2A GH2 GH10 4107 GH43 GH97 GH67 GH43 0882 0398 GH10 xusA xusB 0391 0381 xusC xypB gly43F GH43 4122 GH97 GH43 GH43 GH10 GH43 xytB GH10 4115 03417 Pbr_0883 uxaC xyn10A xypA xusD GH30 PF03629 03432 03450 GH67 GH43 GH10 PF03629 GH10 04385 04393 xusE xyn10C GH10 GH43 0377 Core xylan cluster Legend Glycosyl hydrolases Putative acetylesterase Glucuronate metabolism Inner membrane transporters GH2 GH31 PF03629 Glucuronate isomerase GH3 GH43 Xylose metabolism Fructuronate reductase GH10 GH67 Xylose isomerase GH30 GH97 Xylulokinase Major facilitator superfamily Outer membrane transporters Regulators TBDT Xanthomonas/Caulobacter LacI TBDT SusC/RagA family HTCS Mannonate dehydratase Fig. 2 Conservation of the xylan CUT system of Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris ATCC33913 with the xylose regulon of Caulobacter crescentus CB15 (a) and xylan regulons of Bacteroides ovatus ATCC8483 and Prevotella bryantii B14 (b). The genes are colour-coded based on their predicted roles as indicated in the legend. Genes encoding predicted enzymatic functions are annotated according to their CAZy family number. Transparent stained zones show conserved genes or loci. ORF numbers are from genome projects hosted in the GenBankTM database. (a) For C. crescentus CB15, genes induced by xylose (Hottes et al., 2004) are indicated by a purple halo. Blue circles indicate xylose operator motifs of C. crescentus CB15; white circles show perfect Xcc-568 xyl-boxes. (b) B. ovatus and P. bryantii genes whose expression is induced by xylan are indicated by a blue halo. When monitored in the xylR::pVO insertion mutant, the expression of xylR was not induced by xylan or xylo-oligosaccharides (Table 2), whereas its expression is induced by xylan and X3 when monitored by qRT-PCR in a wild-type background (Table 3; Fig. S4b). Similarly, when monitored in xypB::pVO insertion mutant, the expression of xypB gene was not induced by xylan, X3, X4, or xylose (Table 2) whereas its expression followed the general induction pattern (i.e. high induction by xylo-oligosaccharides and weaker induction by xylose) when monitored by qRT-PCR in a wild-type background (Table 3). These observations suggested that a functional copy of this gene might be required for its own induction by xylan and/or X3 or X4. This hypothesis was confirmed by introducing the (pC-xypB) plasmid, expressing xypB constitutively, into the xypB::pVO mutant (Fig. 4a). Moreover, the induction by X2, X3 and X4 of xytB TBDT promoter fused to the lacZ reporter gene on the pPr-xytB plasmid was abolished in the DxypB deletion mutant and recovered by introducing a functional copy of xypB into the DxypB chromosome (Fig. 4b). The expression pattern of the xylA1, xylB and xylE genes of the xylE locus is clearly different from that observed for the CUT xylan utilization system because they are generally equally induced by xylose and xylo-oligosaccharides (Table 3). Finally, the expression of genes coding for other enzymes located outside the xytA, xylR, xytB and xylE loci, including xyn30A putative Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust xylanase, is not induced by xylose, xylo-oligosaccharides or xylans (data not shown). XylR represses the expression of genes/operons preceded by a xyl-box The conservation of XylR and xyl-boxes in Cc-CB15 and Xcc-568 prompted us to compare the expression of genes located in xyl E, xytA, xytB and xylR loci in the wild-type strain or in a xylR::pVO insertion mutant by qRT-PCR analysis. XylR represses the expression of all genes located immediately downstream from putative xyl-boxes (i.e. xytA, xytB, xypA and xylA2; Table 4). The expression of the four genes located downstream of xypA (xyn10A to xyn10C) is also repressed by XylR (Table 4), suggesting that they form an operon with xypA. Operon mapping by RT-PCR analysis confirmed this hypothesis (Fig. S2). Similarly, it appeared that xytA, xyaA and xyaB, on the one hand, and xytB, xypB, and gly43F, on the other, form two operons negatively regulated by XylR (Table 4, Fig. S2). The expression status was clearly different in the xylR locus. xylA2 which is the unique gene of this locus displaying a xyl-box is the only one whose expression is repressed by XylR in this locus. The expression of agu67A, axeXA, uxuA, gly43E, xyl3A and xylR itself is not repressed by XylR in MME (Table 4). As the expression of all these genes is specifically induced by New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com XytB XypB XCC4121 UxaC XCC4117 XCC4120 Gly2A XCC4116 XypA Xyn10C XCC4119 900/Yesd UxuB XCC4107 xytB locus XCC4115 Xyn10A GH2 385/Yes Xyl3A XCC4106 XCC4118 GH10 487/No Gly43E XCC4105 495/No 980/Yes 501/No 330/yes 471/No 896/Yes 565/Yes 419/No GH10 GH3 GH43 UxuA GH67 XCC4104 654/Yes 446/No 366/No 739/Yes 313/No 1047/Yes AxeXA XyaA XytA XCC2827 XCC2828 343/No XCC4103 XyaB XCC2826 498/Yes XylA2 XylR Agu67A XyaC xytA locus XCC2825 CAZy family xylR locus XCC4100 XCC4101 XCC4102 Name ORF Protein size (aa)/Signal peptidea PF00593 -PF07715/TIGR01782 PF07690/COG2211/ TIGR00792 PF07690/TIGR00893 PF00331 PF02836-PF02837 -PF00703 PF02614 PF00331 PF00933-PF01915 -PF07691 PF01232-PF08125 PF04616 PF02746-PF01188 PF01261 PF03566-PF0532 PF03648-PF7477 -PF07488 PF03629 PF07277 PF00593-PF07715 No conserved domain PF04820 Pfam/COG//TIGRb GusB (E. coli/YP_001458395.1) (Liang et al., 2005) Caul_1838 (Caulobacter sp. K31/ABZ70967) UxaC (Geobacillus stearothermophilus T6/ABI49945) (Shulami et al., 1999) XynB, Xyn10B, CJA3280 (Cellvibrio japonicus Ueda107/P23030) (Kellett et al., 1990; DeBoy et al., 2008) ExuT (Ralstonia solanaceaum/AAL24034) (Gonzalez & Allen, 2003) Xyn10A (Bacteroides xylanisolvens XB1A/CBH32823) (Mirande et al., 2010) XylC (Cellvibrio mixtus/AAD09439) (Fontes et al., 2000) Xyn10D, CJA2888 (Cellvibrio japonicus Ueda107/YP_001983344) (DeBoy et al., 2008) OTER_3378 (Opitutus terrae PB90-1/ACB76655) UxuB (Escherichia coli K12/BAA02591) (Blanco et al., 1986) Xyl3C (P. Bryantii B14/ADD92016) (Dodd et al., 2010a) ManD (Novosphingobium aromaticivorans/2QJJ_A) (Rakus et al., 2007) XylB (Butyvibrio fibrisolvens/P45982) (Utt et al., 1991) SiaE (Mus musculus/CAA67214) (Stoddart et al., 1996) XylA (Piromyces sp. E2/CAB76571) (Harhangi et al., 2003) XylR (C. crescentus CB15/NP421859) (Stephens et al., 2007b) GlcA67A (Cellvibrio japonicus/AAL5772) (Nurizzo et al., 2002) PHZ_c2924 (Phenylobacterium zucineum HLK1/YP_002131762.1) Patl_3278 (Pseudoalteromonas atlantica T6c/YP_662838.1) Pass1 (Rattus Norvegicus/Q5BKC6) (Liu et al., 2000) PyrH (Streptomyces rugosporus/AAU95674) (Zehner et al., 2005) Representative homologous protein (species/accession no) (reference)c 29/444 51/950 34/389 457/no 979/Yes 439/No 599/Yes 473/No 25/453 39/282 919/Yes 379/Yes 378/Yes 45/359 43/377 68/877 378/Yes 486/No 857/Yes 517/No 402/No 541/Yes 437/No 351/No 732/Yes 238/No 1006/Yes 479/No 519/No Protein size (aa)/Signal peptidea 45/359 41/457 42/821 38/509 32/202 32/262 71/401 61/435 50/351 55/719 48/231 42/999 39/126 34/491 Identity (%)/amino acid overlap Table 1 Identification and properties of the relevant ORFs from Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris ATCC33913 (Xcc-568) xylan CUT system Putative hexuronate transporter TonB-dependent transporter Xylo-oligosaccharides inner membrane transporter Endo-1,4-beta-xylanase Putative glycoside hydrolase Glucuronate isomerase Putative endo -1,4-beta-xylanase Putative D-mannonate dehydratase Putative beta -xylosidase-alpha/L -arabinofuranosidase Putative beta-D -xylosidase Fructuronate reductase Putative acetylesterase Xylose isomerase LacI family repressor Alpha-D-glucuronidase Putative Tryptophan halogenase Hypothetical Pass1-related protein SapC-related protein TonB-dependent transporter Proposed annotation in Xcc-568 904 Research New Phytologist Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust XylB XylA1 XylE xylE locus XCC1757 XCC1758 XCC1759 Gly43B Abf51A Xyl39A Gly43C XCC1178 XCC1191 XCC3975 XCC4064 GH51 508/Yesd 544/Yes GH43 GH39 GH43 549/Yesd 521/Yes GH30 GH43 GH43 CAZy family 405/Yes 526/Yes 497/No 446/No 481/No 344/No Protein size (aa)/Signal peptidea PF04616/COG3507 PF01229/COG3664 PF06964/COG3534 PF04616/COG3507 PF02055/COG5520 PF04616/COG3507 PF00370-PF02782 PF01261 PF00083 PF04616 Pfam/COG//TIGRb Abf51A CJA_2769 (Cellvibrio japonicus/AAK84947) (Beylot et al., 2001) XynB1 (Geobacillus stearothermophilus T/ABI49941) (Shulami et al., 1999) XynB (Paenibacillus sp. JDR-2/ABV90487) (Chow et al., 2007) XynC (Xanthomonas campestris pv vesiscatoria/YP362696) (Szczesny et al., 2010) XynC (Erwinia chrysanthemi/AAB53151) (Keen et al., 1996) XynB (Paenibacillus sp. JDR-2/ABV90487) (Chow et al., 2007) XynB (Paenibacillus sp. JDR-2/ABV90487) (Chow et al., 2007) XylB (Piromyces sp. E2/CAB76752) (Harhangi et al., 2003) XylA (Piromyces sp. E2/CAB76571) (Harhangi et al., 2003) GlcP (Synechocystis PCC6803/P15729.2) (Zhang et al., 1989) Xsa (Bacteroides ovatus V975/P49943) (Whitehead, 1995) BACOVA_04386 (Bacteroides ovatus 8483/ZP_02067379) (Martens et al., 2011) XynB, PBR0394 (P. bryantii B14/P48791) (Gasparic et al., 1995) Representative homologous protein (species/accession no) (reference)c 29/515 36/483 521/No 504/No 517/Yes 413/Yes 521/No 57/397 33/515 53/508 406/Yes 521/No 81/400 31/427 494/No 437/No 468/No 319/no 54/309 45/494 61/435 52/455 325/no 325/no Protein size (aa)/Signal peptidea 57/313 57/313 Identity (%)/amino acid overlap Putative Beta -xylosidase/alpha-L -arabinofuranosidase Putative Beta -xylosidase/alpha-L -arabinofuranosidase Putative alpha-L -arabinofuranosidase Putative Beta-xylosidase Putative Beta -xylosidase/alpha -L-arabinofuranosidase Putative endo -1,4-beta-xylanase D-xylose Xylose isomerase inner membrane transporter D-xylulokinase Putative exoxylanase Proposed annotation in Xcc-568 b Signal peptide prediction using SignalP (http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/SignalP/; Emanuelsson et al., 2007). As determined by using the Conserved Domain Database (Marchler-Bauer et al., 2011) and the Pfam database (Finn et al., 2010). c The reported homologous proteins are those showing the highest score among proteins with an experimentally defined function. In the absence of relevant biochemical data, the most similar protein from bacteria outside the Xanthomonadaceae family was reported. d Start codon prediction revised in this work. All other start codons are from GenBank (da Silva et al., 2002) or from Blanvillain et al. (2007). a Xyn30A XCC0857 Other genes XCC0149 Gly43A Gly43F Name XCC4122 ORF Table 1 (Continued) New Phytologist Research 905 New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com New Phytologist 906 Research Table 2 Relative expression ratios measured by using pVO155 reporter plasmid insertions in genes of the xylan utilization system grown in the presence of xylan, xylose or xylo-oligosaccharides Expression ratiosb (SDc) 2 mM Locus Gene IDa Name Orienta 0, 125% MME Xnd/MME xytA xylR XCC2828 XCC4101 XCC4102 XCC4103 XCC4104 XCC4105 XCC4106 XCC4107 XCC4115 XCC4116 XCC4117 XCC4118 XCC4120 XCC4121 XCC4122 xytA xylR agu67A axeXA uxuA gly43E xyl3A uxuB xyn10C gly2A uxaC xyn10A xytB xypB gly43F R R F F F F F F R R R R F F F 20.85 (2.02) 0.81 (0.02) 0.95 (0.09) 1.71 (0.04) 1.56 (0.21) 4.80 (0.04) 3.76 (0.002) 4.08 (0.02) 11.68 (1.31) 12.90 (0.26) 11.58 (0.85) 5.78 (1.23) 39.56 (5.31) 1.42 (0.06) 48.51 (2.02) xytB 20 mM MME X1d/MME MME X1d/MME MME X2d/MME MME X3d/MME MME X4d/MME 15.66 (2.76) 0.37 (0.01) 6.87 (0.95) 4.31 (0.15) 3.28 (0.32) 3.43 (0.38) 3.29 (0.06) 3.34 (0.17) 1.95 (0.14) 2.00 (0.19) 2.42 (0.03) 1.17 (0.18) 29.20 (1.49) 1.08 (0.25) 30.02 (9.18) 6.68 (0.27) 0.55 (0.03) 1.61 (0.14) 1.87 (0.23) 1.33 (0.05) 1.12 (0.04) 1.20 (0.14) 1.40 (0.06) 0.92 (0.12) 1.21 (0.04) 1.47 (0.21) 0.97 (0.15) 1.65 (0.12) 0.44 (0.01) 1.06 (0.01) 59.51 (4.39) 0.73 (0.01) 27.15 (6.29) 19.69 (3.41) 11.01 (0.29) 21.89 (6.53) 13.48 (1.86) 15.49 (1.51) 18.23 (1.73) 29.73 (1.11) 31.39 (1.89) 4.00 (0.28) 129.75 (2.81) 4.48 (0.13) 10.64 (2.42) 67.42 (1.10) 0.63 (0.02) 24.79 (6.36) 19.07 (1.77) 9.04 (0.12) 23.27 (3.57) 13.03 (1.19) 14.84 (0.39) 15.07 (1.03) 23.42 (2.74) 27.16 (2.85) 4.59 (0.35) 152.15 (2.03) 0.80 (0.02) 11.26 (1.65) 63.14 (4.60) 0.64 (0.02) 23.97 (5.74) 17.79 (1.56) 9.97 (0.59) 21.28 (6.04) 13.03 (2.40) 14.67 (0.25) 15.57 (0.55) 26.07 (2.60) 28.05 (2.31) 5.01 (0.70) 137.63 (3.53) 0.67 (0.03) 5.19 (0.91) a Gene ID and transcriptional orientation are from Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris strain ATCC33913 (da Silva et al., 2002). F, forward; R, reverse. All ratios are from expression monitored by measuring b-glucuronidase activity of mutants carrying pVO155 insertion in the tested genes. c SD, standard deviation obtained from values of three independent experiments. d Minimal medium (MME) was supplemented with xylan (Xn), xylose (X1), xylobiose (X2), xylotriose (X3) or xylotetraose (X4). b Table 3 Relative expression ratios measured by qRT-PCR for genes in the xylan utilization system in the presence of xylan, xylose or xylo-oligosaccharides Expression ratiosb (SDc) 2 mM Locus Gene IDa Name Orient.a 0, 125% MME Xnd/MME xytA XCC2825 XCC2826 XCC2828 XCC4100 XCC4101 XCC4102 XCC4103 XCC4107 XCC4119 XCC4120 XCC4121 XCC4122 XCC1757 XCC1758 XCC1759 xyaC xyaB xytA xylA2 xylR agu67A axeXA uxuB xypA xytB xypB gly43F xylB xylA1 xylE R R R F R F F F R F F F F F F 2.16 (0.06) 2.54 (0.83) 20.32 (1.42) 1.36 (0.07) 2.54 (0.11) 6.25 (1.06) 4.25 (1.15) 4.37 (0.68) 23.47 (0.4) 43.49 (6.32) 3.19 (0.69) 17.17 (3.65) 1.47 (0.55) 1.37 (0.03) 0.99 (0.21) xylR xytB xylE 20 mM MME X1d/MME MME X1d/MME MME X2d/MME MME X3d/MME MME X4d/MME nde nd nd 3.03 (0.39) nd nd nd nd 3.96 (0.62) nd nd 2.31 (0.66) 4.55 (0.87) 20.52 (0.64) 6.04 (0.54) 0.92 (0.04) nd nd 3.21 (0.23) 1.08 (0.29) 5.15 (2.22) 2.60 (0.62) 3.39 (1.40) 1.02 (0.06) 3.07 (1.01) 1.48 (0.23) 0.87 (0.18) 6.00 (0.64) 3.23 (1.70) 4.54 (0.25) 3.61 (0.76) nd nd 20.25 (2.70) nd nd nd nd 14.24 (1.25) nd 7.13 (3.26) 25.77 (9.58) 4.91 (2.23) 3.24 (1.94) 2.82 (0.80) 4.78 (0.72) 7,48 (1.03) 34.65 (1.54) 19.37 (2.99) 10.57 (1.92) 69.37 (11.35) 54.07 (13.73) 30.62 (2.06) 15.95 (1.24) 266.69 (28.91) 5.41 (0.99) 20.13 (6.32) 4.03 (1.33) 2.42 (0.99) 2.46 (0.43) 2.53 (0.63) nd nd 18.08 (2.61) nd nd nd nd 16.52 (1.48) nd 3.43 (1.00) 15.95 (5.20) 2.67 (0.23) 1.15 (0.49) 1.73 (0.15) a Gene ID and transcriptional orientation are from Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris strain ATCC33913 (da Silva et al., 2002). F, forward; R, reverse. Expression was determined by qRT-PCR in the wild-type strain; calculation of relative expression includes normalisation against the 16S rRNA endogenous control. c SD, standard deviation obtained from values of three independent experiments. d Minimal medium (MME) was supplemented with xylan (Xn), xylose (X1), xylobiose (X2), xylotriose (X3) or xylotetraose (X4). e nd, not determined. b xylo-oligosaccharides and to a lesser extent by xylose, we compared their expression by qRT-PCR in wild-type or xylR::pVO genetic backgrounds. Our data clearly show that the induction of New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com xylR expression by X3 depends on a functional copy of xylR (Fig. S4b). Similarly, the induction of agu67A, axeXA and uxuB by X1 and X3 appears to be positively influenced by XylR (Fig. S4). Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust New Phytologist Research 907 Xylan Xyn10A (XCC4118) AX2 GAX3 GA X3 ? Xyn10C (XCC4115) Agu67A AxeXA Gly2A Gly43E XyaC Xyl3A Xyn30A XytA ? ? xylose X2 ? ? ? XytB Periplasm ? XypB XypA ? XylE Cytoplasm D-glucuronate D-xylose Glucuronate isomerase Xylose isomerase UxaC Gly43F G XylR (XCC4117) (XCC4122) (XCC4101) D-fructuronate XylA1 XylA2 (XCC1758) (XCC4100) D-xylulose Fructuronate reductase Xylulokinase (XCC4107) F-6-P D-mannonate Mannonate dehydratase GA3P UxuA Glycolysis G-6-P UxuB XylB (XCC1757) D-xylulose-5-P Pentose cycle (XCC4104) 2-keto-3-deoxygluconate (KDG) Pyruvate KDG kinase KdgK (XCC0118) KDGP aldolase 2-keto-3-deoxy6phosphogluconate (KDGP) KdgA (XCC2140) -D-Xylopyranose -D-Glucopyranuronic acid also with 4-O-methyl groups ( ) -L-Arabinofuranose O-acetyl groups Fig. 3 Model of xylan degradation pathway in Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris ATCC33913. Xyn10A is a key extracellular enzyme in the degradation of xylan. This endo-1,4-b-xylanase of family GH10 releases short to medium-sized xylo-oligosaccharides that can be substituted with various side chains such as L-arabinose, D-glucoronic acid or its 4-O-methyl ether, thus generating decorated or nondecorated xylo-oligosaccharides such as glucuronoxylotriose (GAX3), arabinoxylobiose (AX2), xylotriose (X3) or xylobiose (X2), for example. These compounds are either directly taken up into the periplasm or further degraded in the extracellular medium to generate transportable molecules. The transport of some hydrolysis products might be mediated by XytA, XytB or as yet unidentified TBDTs or unknown porins. The transported degradation products are further degraded in the periplasm to generate short xylo-oligosaccharides (X2, X3 …). The exact location of the different degradation steps is not yet known. Enzymes displaying a signal peptide are active either in the periplasm or in the extracellular medium or even bound to membranes. They are shown in the yellow box that crosses the outer membrane. The xylo-oligosaccharides are then transported into the cytoplasm by XypB inner membrane transporter. Xylose monomers present in the periplasm are taken up through XylE, whereas glucuronic acid might be transported by XypA putative hexuronate transporter. Inside the cell, xylooligomers are hydrolysed to xylose by Gly43F putative exoxylanase. Xylose is converted into xylulose-5-phosphate, which can enter the pentose cycle. D-glucoronic acid is converted to glyceraldehyde 3-P and pyruvate by a five-step pathway catalysed by three enzymes of the xylan/xylose CUT system, UxaC, UxuB, and UxuA and two other enzymes KdgK, and KdgA. Glyceraldehyde 3-P and pyruvate can enter the Embden–Meyerhof–Parnas pathway. This might also be the case for the uxuA, gly43E and xyl3A genes which are locaded between axeXA and uxuB and that seem to form a large operon with agu67A. Indeed, expression experiments carried out by qRT-PCR analysis with the wild-type strain and Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust the agu67A::pVO mutant suggest that the pVO insertion into agu67A, the first gene of this putative operon, has a polar effect on the transcription of axeXA and uxuB (Fig. S5) as well as uxuA, gly43E and xyl3A (data not shown). This insertion into agu67A New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com New Phytologist 908 Research xypB expression No supplement 250 2 mM xylose 2 mM xylobiose 200 2 mM xylotriose 2 mM xylotetraose 150 100 50 0 xypB::pVO xypB::pVO /pC-xypB (b) β-galactosidase activity (Miller units) β-glucuronidase activity (Miller units) (a) xytB promoter activity (pPr-xytB) 1000 No supplement 2 mM xylose 2 mM xylobiose 800 2 mM xylotriose 2 mM xylotetraose 600 400 200 0 Wild-type ΔxypA ΔxypB ΔxypB::xypB Genetic background Genetic background Fig. 4 Expression of the Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris ATCC33913 (LMG568) xypB and xytB genes in presence of xylose or xylooligosaccharides. (a) The expression of xypB was monitored in xypB::pVO insertion mutant or in xypB::pVO strain carrying the complementation plasmid pC-xypB (xypB::pVO/pC-xypB) by measuring the b-glucuronidase activity after 6 h of growth in MME supplemented with xylose or xylo-oligosaccharides at a final concentration of 2 mM. (b) The pPr-xytB plasmid carrying the promoterless lacZ reporter gene under the xytB promoter region was used to monitor xytB expression in presence of xylose or xylo-ol igosaccharides in different genetic backgrounds. b-galactosidase activity was measured after 6 h induction in MME supplemented with xylose or xylo-oligosaccharides at a final concentration of 2 mM. Bars, SD calculated from at least three different biological repetitions. Table 4 Regulation of genes in the xylan CUT system by XylR Locus Gene IDa Name Orientationa Expression ratiosb (SDc) xylR::pVO mutant in MME/Wild type in MME xytA locus XCC2825 XCC2826 XCC2827 XCC2828d XCC4100d XCC4101 XCC4102 XCC4103 XCC4104 XCC4105 XCC4106 XCC4107 XCC4115 XCC4116 XCC4117 XCC4118 XCC4119d XCC4120d XCC4121 XCC4122 xyaA xyaB xyaC xytA xylA2 xylR agu67A axeXA uxuA gly43E xyl3A uxuB xyn10C Gly2A uxaC xyn10A xypA xytB xypB gly43F R R R R F R F F F F F F R R R R R F F F 5.99 (1.21) 3.98 (1.79) 110.33 (31.91) 685.25 (142.12) 7.16 (2.60) 1.57 (0.60) 1.31 (0.24) 0.35 (0.10) 0.78 (0.19) 0.62 (0.06) 1.00 (0.57) 0.97 (0.01) 10.28 (0.75) 61.8 (12.12) 129.34 (21.81) 54.98 (12.15) 20.09 (2,27) 358.6 (74.96) 85.25 (5.95) 47.94 (3.79) xylR locus xytB locus a Gene ID and transcriptional orientation are from Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris strain ATCC33913 (da Silva et al., 2002). F, forward; R, reverse. Expression was obtained by qRT-PCR with bacteria grown in MME; calculation of relative expression includes normalisation against the 16S rRNA endogenous control. c SD, standard deviation calculated from values of at least three independent experiments. d Contains a xyl-box motif upstream. b has no effect on the transcription of xylR, xyn10A or xytB (Fig. S5). Finally, the expression of genes of the xylE locus (Fig. S4a and data not shown) or coding for other enzymes putatively involved in xylan deconstruction but located outside the xytA, xylR or xytB loci, including xyn30A putative xylanase, is not controlled by XylR (data not shown). New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com Xyn10A, Agu67A, Gly43F, XylR and XypB control the production of extracellular xylanase activity In order to see whether genes belonging to the xytA, xylR, and xytB loci are involved in the production of the extracellular xylanolytic activity produced by Xcc-568, mutants in these loci were tested for the production of extracellular xylanase activity. Most Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust New Phytologist Research 909 of the studied mutants displayed xylanase activities similar to that of the wild-type strain (data not shown). However, some mutants were significantly affected (Table 5). The level of xylanase activity was increased in the xylR repressor mutant, thus confirming that this gene represses the expression of genes required for xylan degradation. More surprisingly, the activity was also significantly higher in the Dgly43F deletion mutant than in the wild-type strain (Table 5). This mutant was the only mutant of family GH43 to show a modification in xylanase activity. The introduction of the pC-gly43F complementation plasmid into the Dgly43F mutant significantly reduced the level of xylanase activity, confirming the role of this enzyme in the production of xylanase activity. No activity was detected for Dxyn10A mutant, which carries a deletion of xyn10A xylanase gene. Complementation experiments conducted with pC-xyn10A plasmid, confirmed that the extracellular activity detected in these conditions is coded by xyn10A gene (Table 5). Accordingly, we did not observe any significant reduction in extracellular xylanase activity in Dxyn10C or xyn30A::pVO mutants affected in the two other putative xylanase genes of Xcc (Table 5). The level of extracellular xylanase activity was also significantly lower in agu67A::pVO mutant. This reduced phenotype was complemented by the introduction of pC-agu67A plasmid (Table 5). This suggests that the putative a-glucuronidase encoded by this gene is mandatory to get full extracellular xylanase activity. Finally, the activity was severely decreased in DxypB inner membrane transporter mutant but not in any other transporter mutants (Table 5). Complementation experiments carried out with pC-xypB plasmid confirmed that the reduction in xylanase activity is due to the mutation in this gene. This result correlates well with expression results suggesting that this putative transporter plays a crucial role in the induction of the system. Xylose is transported across Xcc-568 inner membrane by XylE Table 5 Production of extracellular Xylanase by Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris strains Strain Xcc-568 (wild-type) Putative xylanase mutants xyn30A::pVO Dxyn10C Dxyn10A DXyn10A/pC-xyn10A WT/pC-xyn10A Other xylan degradation associated mutants agu67A::pVO agu67A::pVO/pCZ1016b agu67A::pVO/pC-agu67A Dgly43F Dgly43F/pC-gly43F Inner membrane transporter mutants DxypA DxypB DxypB/pC-xypB xypB ::pVO xypB ::pVO/pC-xypB xylE::pVO TonB-dependent transporter mutants DxytA DxytB DxytADxytB Regulatory mutants xylR::pVO xylR::pVO/pC-xylR Xcc-568/pC-xylR Xylanase relative level (plate assay)a + + + ++ ++ +/ +/ + +++ +/ + +/ + +/ +++ + + + + +++ +/ +/ Xylanase relative activity was estimated by calculating the (H2–C2)/C2 ratio, where H is the diameter of the halo and C the diameter of the bacterial colony, measured 4 d after spotting. The symbols +++, ++, +, +/ or refer to the production of very high, high, medium, low or nonproduction of xylanase relative activity by the different strains. b pCZ1016 is the empty expression vector for complementation experiments. This empty vector was introduced into all tested mutants without affecting xylanase activity (data not shown) as shown for agu67A:: pVO mutant. a Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust The phenotype of xypB mutants, the presence of TBDT and other inner membrane transporter genes in the XylR regulon prompted us to study the transport of xylose and xylo-oligosaccharides by Xcc. The initial concentration-dependent [14C]xylose transport, reflecting the dissociation constant (Kd) for xylose uptake was determined using the previously described rapid dilution method (Neugebauer et al., 2005; Blanvillain et al., 2007). The deduced Kd (122 lM) is in a range similar to that of Kd values obtained for passive diffusion through porins (Boulanger et al., 2010). Moreover, the kinetic values showed that the uptake rate was low and monophasic (Fig. 5), suggesting passive diffusion. In agreement with these data the transport of xylose is not depending on XytA and XytB TBDTs (Table 6). Experiments performed with mutants in xypA, xypB or xylE, the inner membrane transporter genes identified in the xylan/xylose CUT system, showed that XylE only is required for xylose transport across the inner membrane. The uptake rate of labelled xylose obtained for xylE mutants represented only c. 20% of the rate obtained for the wild-type strain (Table 6). These results were confirmed by comparing maximum specific growth rates (lmax) of the wild-type strain and mutants in transporter genes in MME supplemented with xylose. Growth of the xylE::pVO mutant was impaired on MME containing xylose, contrary to the xypA, xypB, DxytA or DxytB1 mutants (Fig. 6a). In the xylE::pVO-complemented strain, xylose transport capacity and growth on MME-xylose were both restored (Table 6; Fig. 6a). xytB locus is required for normal growth in presence of xylo-oligosaccharides Because growth of the wild-type strain and xylE mutants in the presence of xylose corroborated the transport status observed for [14C] xylose uptake by these strains, we speculated that growth rate studies might indirectly allow us to study the transport of xylo-oligosaccharides. We focused this analysis on the xytA and New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com New Phytologist 910 Research Table 6 Rates of 14C-labelled xylose transport of mutants compared to the rate in Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris ATCC33913 wild-type straina Strain Mean% transport (SD)b Protein family Wild-type xylR::pVO DxytA-DxytB1 DxypA DxypB DxypA-DxypB xylE::pVO xylE::pVO/pC-xylE DxypA-DxypB-xylE::pVO LacI family regulator TBDT MFS transporter Sugar-cation symporter Inner membrane transporters MFS transporter Inner membrane transporters 100 (6.4) 110.3 (19.6) 92.5 (16.3) 106.3 (9.4) 97 (4.2) 109.1 (3.8) 19.8 (3.3) 101.4 (7.6) 20 (2.7) a Transport rates were measured 60 min after addition of 14C-labelled xylose. b Standard deviations were calculated from three independent experiments. [14C] xylose molecules per cell (×1000) 450 400 350 300 250 type growth rate in the presence of X3 was restored to the gly43F::pVO insertion mutant by introducing the pC-gly43F complementation plasmid. Similarly, the DxypB deletion mutant could be complemented by introducing the pC-xypB plasmid. However, the xypB::pVO insertion mutant was only partially complemented by the introduction of pC-xypB whereas it was fully complemented by the pC-xypB-gly43F plasmid (Fig. 6b). These results confirm that xypB and gly43F are co-transcribed. In the presence of X3, the lmax of DxytB1 and xytB::pVO mutants was also reduced but remained higher than that of the xypB or gly43F insertion mutants (Fig. 6b). Surprisingly, although considered as nonpolar, the deletion introduced into xytB mutants could not be complemented by introducing the complementation plasmid pC-xytB (Fig. 6b). Smaller deletions were constructed (Fig. S1) and similar results were obtained even with the smaller deletion mutant (DxytB3) (data not shown). The DxytB1 and xytB::pVO mutants were fully complemented by the pCxypB-gly43F plasmid (Fig. 6b). Previous data obtained with the XylR::pVO mutant showed that xytB, xypB and gly43F form an operon. However, the fact that the lmax of the xytB insertion or deletion mutants is similar and higher than that of the xypB or gly43F insertion mutants in the presence of X3 suggests that xytB is not fully co-transcribed with xypB and gly43F in these conditions. Moreover, complementation experiments suggest a cis-regulatory effect. Altogether, these data show that that xypB and gly43F may play an important role in xylo-oligosaccharide transport and metabolism. The phenotype of xytB deletion mutants renders the study of the role of this TBTD in xylo-oligosaccharide transport difficult to assess. 200 xytA and xytB loci are important for growth on plant leaves 150 100 50 0 0 20 40 60 [14C] xylose (μM) Fig. 5 Concentration-dependent transport of 14C-labelled xylose into Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris. Cells were grown in minimal medium without xylose, and transport was measured for 15 s at the [14C] xylose concentrations indicated. The error bars indicate SD obtained from three independent experiments. xytB loci because they both contain transporter genes. The wildtype strain and mutants in these loci were grown in MME supplemented with X2, X3 or X4, at a final concentration of 2 mM, a concentration that induced the expression of most genes of the xylan utilization system. Data obtained with X3 are presented (Fig. 6b). Similar results were obtained with X2 and X4 (data not shown). We noticed that lmax of the wild-type strain was slightly lower in presence of X3 than in the presence of xylose (Fig. 6). The lmax of the xytB, xypB and gly43F mutants was significantly affected in the presence of X3 as compared to that of the wild-type strain, whereas it was not impaired in presence of xylose (Fig. 6). WildNew Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com We studied pathogenicity of pVO155 insertion mutants constructed in this study on cabbage or Arabidopsis thaliana host plants. These experiments were performed using two distinct methods: the wound inoculation method, that allows direct delivery of bacterial cells into the xylem vessels of leaves, or the infiltration method, which delivers bacteria into the plant leaf mesophyll (Meyer et al., 2005). None of the mutants tested, including the xytA, xytB, xypB single mutants and DxytA-DxytB1 double mutants, as well as mutants altered in the three xylanase genes, were significantly affected in pathogenicity (data not shown). The growth of xytA::pVO and xytB::pVO mutants in Arabidopsis plant tissues was also not significantly different from that of the wild-type (data not shown). We also compared the survival and the multiplication of the wild-type strain and xytA:: pVO or xytB::pVO mutants in the phyllosphere of cabbage (host plant) or bean (nonhost plant). The dynamics of bacterial population densities was followed after spray inoculation of the leaves in conditions that do not favour disease expression (Darsonval et al., 2008). The multiplication of the xytB::pVO mutant on cabbage was significantly lower than that of the wild-type strain only during the first 8 d following the inoculation (Fig. 7a). Cell densities measured for the xytA::pVO mutant on host plants were clearly lower than that measured for the wild-type strain and xytB mutant (Fig. 7a). Interestingly, the survival of both xytA and xytB Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust New Phytologist 0.20 0.20 –1 Maximum specific growth rate (μmax, h ) (b) –1 0.15 * 0.10 0.05 0.15 0.10 * * * * * * 0.05 * * c-5 68 /pC Z1 xyl 01 6 E:: pV O/ pC xyl Z1 E:: 01 pV 6 O/ pC -xy l E Δx ytA /pC Z1 01 6 Δx yp A/p CZ 10 16 Δx y xyt tB1/ pC B:: Z1 pV 0 O/ pC 16 Z1 01 Δx 6 y p xyp B/p B:: C Z pV 10 O /pC 16 gly 43 Z1 F:: 01 pV 6 O/ pC Z1 01 6 Xc c-5 68 /pC Z1 01 xyl 6 E:: pV O/ pC Z1 01 6 Δx ytA /pC Z1 01 Δx 6 ytA /pC -xy Δx tA yp A/p CZ 10 16 Δx ytB 1/p CZ Δx 10 Δx yt 16 ytB 1/p B1/p CCxyt xyp xyt B B B:: pV -gly4 3F O/ xyt xyt p CZ B:: B:: 10 pV pV 1 O/ pC O/pC 6 -xy pB xytB -gl y4 3F Δx yp B/p Δx CZ yp xyp B/p 1016 B:: Cxyp pV O/ B x pC yp xyp B:: Z1 B:: p 01 VO pV 6 O/ /pC pC -xy -xy pB pB gly -gl 43 y4 F:: 3F pV gly O/ 43 p F:: CZ pV 10 O/ 16 pC -gl y4 3F 0 0 Xc Maximum specific growth rate (μmax, h ) (a) Research 911 Xylose Xylotriose Fig. 6 Maximal specific growth rates of Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris wild-type (WT) and mutant strains in the presence of xylose (a) or xylotriose (b). After overnight growth in rich medium, cells were harvested, washed and resuspended in minimal medium. Xylose and xylotriose were added at a final concentration of 2 mM. Maximal specific growth rates (lmax) were calculated during the log phase of growth. Hatched bars correspond to complementation experiments. Colour codes correspond to functional categories as described in Fig. 2. Bars, SD obtained from at least three independent experiments. The asterisks indicate a significant difference with P < 0.05 as compared to the WT strain in the same culture condition based on the results of an unpaired Kruskal–Wallis’s test. mutants was significantly altered on nonhost plant and the defect of the xytA mutant was again more pronounced than that of the xytB mutant (Fig. 7b). Discussion The phyllosphere represents the aerial parts of terrestrial plants including leaves, stems, buds, flowers and fruits. This habitat has been estimated to cover a global surface of c. 1 billion square kilometres supporting > 1026 bacteria (Morris & Kinkel, 2002; Lindow & Brandl, 2003; Whipps et al., 2008). Although the phyllosphere has been less intensively studied than the rhizosphere, metagenomic approaches have recently given interesting information on bacterial communities colonizing this vast niche (Vorholt, 2012). Recently, a metaproteogenomics analysis performed on leaves of soybean, clover and Arabidopsis identified TBDTs as the most prominent group of transport proteins. These transporters were over-represented among the proteins assigned to Sphingomonas which was one of the predominant genera identified in a study by Delmotte et al. (2009). It was postulated that this over-representation of TBDTs might play a role in the successful adaptation of these bacteria on plant leaves. In this study, by performing functional and genomic analyses of xylan utilization in Xcc, we identified a xylan CUT system which is required for optimal colonization of plant leaves. Therefore, our work seems to confirm the importance of TBDTs for the adaptation of bacteria to the phyllosphere. The xylan CUT system of Xcc-568 comprises the xytA, xytB and xylR loci which contain enzymes for the degradation of xylan, Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust the metabolism of xylose and glucuronic acid, as well as inner membrane transporters beside TBDTs. We also identified a fourth locus, xylE, involved in xylose utilization (see model Fig. 3). The expression of most of genes of the xylan CUT system is specifically and highly induced by short xylo-oligosaccharides and to lesser extent by xylose. The expression of a large proportion of these genes is repressed by XylR LacI-type repressor. The regulation mediated by XylR is strictly correlated with the presence of a 14-bp palindromic xyl-box motif in the promoter region of repressed genes or operons. Interestingly, six contiguous genes, agu67A, axeXA, uxuA, gly43E, xyl3A and uxuB, which seem to form an operon, although being induced by xylo-oligosaccharides or xylose, are not under the repression of xylR and no xyl-box was identified in their promoter regions. On the contrary, their induction by X3 as well as that of xylR is positively affected by XylR. This observation shows that the induction by xylooligosaccharides or xylose is not solely under XylR control and suggests the existence of other regulators controlling the utilization of xylan and xylose in Xcc-568. Further work is needed to characterize the inducer of XylR in Xcc-568 and to identify other putative regulators of this system. Among the three xylanase genes identified in the Xcc-568 genome, xyn10A located in the xytB locus was shown to be responsible for the detected extracellular activity produced by this bacterium in our test conditions. No extracellular activity associated with Xyn10C (XCC4118) or Xyn30A (XCC0857) was detected, although both proteins harbour a signal peptide and seem to be secreted like Xyn10A (XCC4115) (see Fig. S6 and New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com New Phytologist 912 Research Population sizes log (CFU g–1 FW) (a) 7 6 A A 5 4 xytB::pVO A B B A 3 B B 2 WT A A xytA::pVO B B A A B Cabbage 1 0 0 3h 2 4 6 8 10 12 Time post-inoculation (d) Population sizes log (CFU g–1 FW) (b) 7 A A A 6 A A A A B B A A 5 4 A B B 3 C WT xytB::pVO xytA::pVO 2 Bean 1 0 0 3h 2 4 6 8 10 12 Time post-inoculation (d) Fig. 7 Colonization of cabbage and bean leaves by the wild-type strain Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris ATCC33913 (LMG568) and strains mutated in xytA or xytB. (a) Bacterial population densities on cabbage host plants (CFU per gram of fresh weight) were determined on leaves sampled at 3 h and 1, 4, 8 and 11 d after spray inoculation (1 9 106 CFU ml 1). (b) Similar experiments were performed on bean (nonhost plant) leaves. Means and SEMs were calculated for five leaves per plant species and per sampling date. Mean population densities followed by different letters are significantly (P < 0.05) different on the Mann–Whitney test. These experiments were conducted two times independently and similar results were obtained. Methods S1). Xyn30A is the orthologue of XynC which is responsible for the extracellular xylanase activity detected in Xcv (Szczesny et al., 2010). Despite the high similarity between Xyn30A and XynC (81% amino acid identity), the presence in both cases of a signal peptide and the conservation of GH30 family specific catalytic residues (Hurlbert & Preston, 2001; Larson et al., 2003; St John et al., 2011), we did not detect any extracellular activity associated with the xyn30A gene in Xcc-568. This gene is neither regulated by XylR nor induced by xylan and xylooligosaccharides in Xcc-568. We observed that beside Xyn10A, Agu67A, a putative a-glucuronidase involved in the degradation of glucuronic acid decorations, is also required to get full extracellular xylanase activity. This suggests that removal of these side chains from the xylan backbone may potentiate the degradation of xylan. The importance of glucuronic acid liberation during xylan degradation is underscored by the presence of enzymes involved in the metabolism of this carboxylic acid in the xylR and xytB loci (Figs 1, 3). There might also be a coupling between xylan degradation and xylose metabolism because the xylan CUT system comprises the xylA2 gene which codes for a putative xylose isomerase gene. This gene is duplicated in the Xcc-568 genome and the second copy, xylA1, maps in the xylE locus with xylE inner membrane transporter gene, required for xylose uptake. The three genes forming the xylE locus are not under the regulation of XylR and have a New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com different induction pattern than that of xylan CUT system genes, because they are equally induced by xylose and xyl-oligosaccahrides. These observations suggest that there are different regulators for xylose and xylan utilization pathways, but they also suggest that both pathways are interconnected through the metabolism of xylo-oligosaccharides. Our results on the xytBxypB-gly43E operon suggest that XypB and Gly43F play essential functions in this metabolism. Indeed, the XypB putative inner membrane transporter is required for the production of extracellular xylanase activity, for the induction of the xylan CUT system by X3, X4 and xylan, and for growth on xylo-oligosaccharides. These convergent data strongly suggest that this transporter plays a major role in the transport of xylo-oligosaccharides across the inner membrane and that this transport is crucial for the induction of the system and for the physiology of Xcc-568. Although gly43F is also required for normal growth in presence of xylooligosaccharides, a mutation in this gene led to a large increase in extracellular xylanase activity, unlike what was observed for xypB mutants. Gly43F is closely related to XynB from Prevotella bryantii B14 (Table 1). XynB is an intracellular exoxylanase which was proposed to release xylose progressively from xylo-oligosaccharides, including xylobiose, transported inside the cells (Gasparic et al., 1995). In Xcc-568, Gly43F is the only protein of the GH43 family that has no signal peptide, suggesting that it functions in the cytoplasm. We can speculate that Gly43F degrades XypB-transported xylo-oligosaccharides to xylose, thereby promoting bacterial growth. Gly43F may therefore play a central role in the physiology of Xcc-568 by maintaining a balance between the production of xylose and the maintenance of xylo-oligosaccharides which induce the CUT system (Fig. 3). The role of the xytB TBDT gene located upstream from xypB and gly43F is still elusive. Mutations in this gene have an effect on growth with xylo-oligosaccharides, but we were unable to complement these mutations. Our data showed that the xytB, xypB and gly43F genes form an operon repressed by XylR. However, our growth rate results suggest that the situation is more complex in the presence of xylo-oligosaccharides. They suggest the presence of cis-regulatory sequences into xytB driving the expression of xypB and gly43F. Further work is necessary to fully characterize this locus. The xylan CUT system encompasses another TBDT gene, xytA. This gene is the first gene of a XylR-regulated operon which comprises two other genes, xyaA and xyaB whose function in xylan degradation remains unknown. Interestingly, this operon and the downstream gene are very well conserved with a quartet of contiguous genes in Cc-CB15 (Fig. 2a, Table S2). The first two genes of this quartet, including CC0999 TBDT gene, belong to the xylose regulon. This conservation suggests that this set of four genes may play an important role in xylan/xylose metabolism in Xcc-568 and Cc-CB15. The analogy between the Xcc-568 xylan CUT system and the Cc-CB15 xylose-regulon is not restricted to this locus and 10 other genes of the Xcc-568 xylan/xylose CUT system display significant similarities to proteins of Cc-CB15 (Fig. 2a; Table S2). Interestingly, six of these genes belong to the xylose regulon identified in C. cresecentus CB15 (Hottes et al., 2004). This Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust New Phytologist conservation includes proteins involved in the removal of substitutions, xylo-oligosaccharides degradation, glucuronate metabolism and TBDTs. With the exception of Xyn10C, which displays similarities to CC3042, the two other xylanases of Xcc568 are not conserved in C. cresenctus CB15. We identified another putative xylanase, CC2803, of the GH10 family in the Cc-CB15 genome which is not conserved in Xcc-568. Like CC3042, CC2803 was not detected as induced by xylose, but it is located between two genes induced by this monosaccharide (Hottes et al., 2004). These observations suggest that Cc-CB15 is able to degrade xylan. Interestingly, the xylose regulon of Cc-CB15 comprises nine TBDTs, two of which are highly conserved with XytA and XytB. This high number and the conservation with Xcc-568 TBDTs suggest a crucial role for these outer membrane transporters in the uptake of molecules during xylan/xylose catabolism. Recently, sets of genes specifically induced by xylan have been revealed by transcriptomic studies on P. bryantii B14 (Pbr) (Dodd et al., 2010b), and Bacteroides ovatus ATCC8483 (Bov) (Martens et al., 2011), two Bacteroidetes present in the bovine rumen and human gut, respectively. Interestingly, several genes belonging to Xcc-568 xylan CUT system display significant similarities with xylan-induced genes of Pbr and Bov (Fig. 2b, Table S2). Moreover, the xylan regulon of these latter bacteria share a cluster of conserved genes which contains two TBDTs belonging to the SusC family. This cluster is widely conserved among human- and animal-associated Bacteroides spp. and Prevotella spp. and was proposed to constitute a core set of genes required for xylan fragments uptake by gut-associated Bacteroidetes (Dodd et al., 2011). Therefore, it seems that the association between TBDT and xylan utilization is a common feature shared by bacteria belonging to very different phyla and having apparently different lifestyles. Does this mean that TBDTs play a very important role in natural conditions? The exact role of these outer membrane transporters has yet to be determined. However, the involvement of TBDTs may represent two advantages. First, TBDTs allow the binding and uptake of larger molecules than porins. Therefore, they could transport large xylan hydrolysis products thus preventing release of saccharides in the medium that could be used by other microorganisms. Second, they allow active transport of substrate molecules with a very high affinity (Blanvillain et al., 2007). Therefore, it is possible that TBDTs in these systems play a crucial role in the transport of xylan breakdown products when these molecules are present in scarce amounts. This property may be pivotal for oligotrophs such as Caulobacter species (Hottes et al., 2004). In this study, we showed that XytA and XytB TBDTs belong to operons that are required for optimal growth of Xcc-568 on plant leaves. The phyllosphere corresponds to an oligotrophic environment (Lindow & Brandl, 2003) and we can speculate that XytA and XytB may play a crucial role in the adaptation of Xcc-568 to this niche, which is an important step for Xcc life cycle. Therefore, it seems that Xcc-568 and Caulobacter, which belong to different Proteobacteria families, share similar strategies to survive in niches where nutrients are limited. However, both species most probably possess specific features reflecting their lifestyles. The survival and Ó 2013 CNRS New Phytologist Ó 2013 New Phytologist Trust Research 913 development of Xcc in the phyllosphere may be important to maintain population sizes sufficient for disease induction. Previous studies on Xoo and Xcv also showed that xylan degradation play a role in virulence of these strains (Rajeshwari et al., 2005; Szczesny et al., 2010). Therefore, together with another study showing the involvement of HrpG and HrpX, the key regulators of type III secretion system, in the phyllosphere colonization of Xanthomonas fuscans ssp. fuscans (Darsonval et al., 2008), this work sheds new light on mechanisms connecting epiphytic colonization to disease induction in plant pathogenic bacteria. It could also have a significant impact on agro-industrial processes. Acknowledgements We thank Annabelle Four-Burgand and Lennart Lessmeier for technical assistance, Laurent No€el for critical comments on the manuscript. G.D., S.B-B. and A.B. were funded by the French Ministry of Research and Technology. We gratefully acknowledge financial support from the Departement Sante des Plantes et Environnement-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (grant 2007_0441_02) and from the French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (grant ANR-08-BAN-0193-01). This work is part of the ‘Laboratoire d’Excellence’ (LABEX) entitled TULIP (ANR-10-LABX-41). References Angot A, Peeters N, Lechner E, Vailleau F, Baud C, Gentzbittel L, Sartorel E, Genschik P, Boucher C, Genin S. 2006. Ralstonia solanacearum requires Fbox-like domain-containing type III effectors to promote disease on several host plants. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 103: 14 620– 14 625. Arlat M, Gough CL, Barber CE, Boucher C, Daniels MJ. 1991. 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Fig. S1 Mutations and plasmids constructed in the xylE (a), xytA (b), xylR (c) and xytB (d) loci. Fig. S2 Operons mapping in the xytA and xytB loci in the xylR mutant. Fig. S3 Xylose induction motif of Caulobacter crescentus genes and the xyl-box motif of Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris ATCC33913 (Xcc-568). Sequence logos were generated by WebLogo (http://weblogo.berkeley.edu/; Crooks GE, Hon G, Chandonia JM, Brenner SE. 2004. WebLogo: a sequence logo generator. Genome Research 14: 1188–1190). Fig. S4 Effect of pVO155 insertion into the xylR regulatory gene on expression of xylE, xylR, agu67A, axeXA, uxuB and xytB. Fig. S5 Effect of pVO155 insertion into the agu67A gene on expression of xylR, agu67A, axeXA, uxuB, xyn10 and xytB. Fig. S6 Analysis of in vitro secretion of Xyn10A, Xyn10C and Xyn30A putative xylanases. Table S1 List of plasmids and Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris strains used or generated in this study Table S2 Conservation of Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris ATCC33913 (LMG568) proteins encoded by genes induced by xylan, xylooligosaccharides or xylose, in Caulobacter crescentus CB15, Prevotella bryantii B14 or Bacteroides ovatus ATCC8483 proteomes Table S3 Occurrence of perfect xyl-box motif upstream from Xanthomonas campestris pv campestris ATCC33913 genes Table S4 Enzymes active on xylan Method S1 Secretion assays of Xyn10A, Xyn10C and Xyn30A putative xylanases. Please note: Wiley-Blackwell are not responsible for the content or functionality of any supporting information supplied by the authors. Any queries (other than missing material) should be directed to the New Phytologist Central Office. New Phytologist (2013) 198: 899–915 www.newphytologist.com