Previous studies demonstrated the role of the O-antigenic side
chain
of the outer membrane lipopolysaccharides
of Pseudomonas fluorescens strain WCS417r in its ability to induce
resistance against fusarium wilt disease. The
present study compared the colonization of tomato roots
(Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) by P. fluorescens strain
WCS417r with that of a mutant of this strain, lacking the O-antigenic
side chain of its outer membrane lipopolysaccharides (OA−).
Special attention was paid to colonization within root tissues and changes
of
the root ultrastructure induced by the bacterial strains. Experiments were
performed with tomato plants rooted in rock
wool and tomato seedlings grown on agar. Numeration of colony-forming units
showed that wild-type strain
WCS417r colonized the root interior of tomato grown in rock wool to a higher
extent than its OA− mutant B4,
whereas colonization of the rhizoplane did not differ between the two.
Light microscopy observations of cross
sections of roots grown on agar showed that (i) colonization of the root
interior by both wild-type and OA− mutant
was inter- and intracellular, (ii) colonization of the internal root tissues
mainly occurred if the Pseudomonas strains
were inoculated at sites of lateral root emergence, (iii) the wild type
colonized the root interior more frequently than did its OA−
mutant. Thickening of the cortical cell walls, in reaction to the bacterial
colonization of epidermal
or hypodermal cells, or cortical intercellular spaces, suggested that local
defence reactions of the plant occurred.
Altogether, these results indicate the involvement of the O-antigenic side
chain of the outer membrane
lipopolysaccharides in the endophytic colonization of the tomato root by
P. fluorescens WCS417r, and lead us to
hypothesize that induction of disease resistance by strain WCS417r might
be
related to the extent of colonization of the internal root tissues.