Pantoea agglomerans: a mysterious bacterium of evil and good. Part III. Deleterious effects: infections of humans, animals and plants.
- Journal Article
- Review
Summary
The research article explores Pantoea agglomerans, a bacterium that lives on plants and can sometimes cause infections in humans, animals, and other plants.
Human Infections
The main ways humans can get infected with P. agglomerans are:
- Through wounds caused by plant material, such as thorns or splinters. This could happen during gardening, farming, or while children are playing.
- From hospital-acquired infections, often in individuals with compromised immune systems.
Infections can result in septic arthritis or synovitis, endophthalmitis, periostitis, endocarditis and osteomyelitis. If caught and treated with antibiotics, most patients recover completely. Large-scale infections in hospitals have been reported where the bacterium was present on medical equipment or fluids.
Animal Infections
P. agglomerans can infect animals but reports of such cases are rare. Some instances include:
- Cases of abortion and placentitis in horses.
- Cases of a hemorrhagic disease in a certain species of fish named Coryphaena hippurus.
Interactions with Other Organisms
P. agglomerans commonly occurs as symbionts in insects and other arthropods.
Plant Infections
P. agglomerans is often found in plants, acting as mutualistic organism. However, it can also cause diseases in various cultivable plants. The list includes:
- Cotton, sweet onion, maize, and sorghum.
- Bamboo, walnut, and a grass known as onion couch.
- An ornamental plant called Chinese taro and a plant called gypsophila.
- A closely related Pantoea species also causes bacterial blight disease in an edible mushroom called Pleurotus eryngii.
Pathogenicity Mechanisms
The plant pathogenicity of Pantoea agglomerans is due to several genetically governed mechanisms, such as the hypersensitive response, pathogenicity (hrp) systems, production of phytohormones, and a quorum-sensing feedback system. They also have a type III secretion system that sends effector proteins into the cytosol of a plant cell.
Cite This Article
Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Department of Biological Health Hazards and Parasitology, Institute of Rural Health, Lublin, Poland.
- Department of Pneumonology, Oncology and Allergology, Medical University of Lublin, Lublin, Poland.
- Department of Medical Biology, Institute of Rural Health, Lublin, Poland.
- Department of Biological Health Hazards and Parasitology, Institute of Rural Health, Lublin, Poland.
- Department of Pneumonology, Oncology and Allergology, Medical University of Lublin, Lublin, Poland.
MeSH Terms
- Animals
- Animals, Domestic
- Arthropods / microbiology
- Cross Infection / microbiology
- Cross Infection / physiopathology
- Enterobacteriaceae Infections / microbiology
- Enterobacteriaceae Infections / physiopathology
- Humans
- Pantoea / pathogenicity
- Pantoea / physiology
- Plant Diseases / microbiology