ABSTRACT
Although the high-altitude limit for microbial survival in the Earth–atmosphere system has remained a scientific curiosity and topic of study, the ecological significance of long-distance microbial dispersal in the atmosphere has been perceived to have marginal relevance. Here, we report the characterization of novel plant pathogenic species of
Curtobacterium
that were isolated from samples collected at altitudes ranging from 1.5 to 29 km above sea level. Whole genome-based phylogenies of three strains, paired with plant challenge assays, indicate that each is a previously unrecognized species and causes disease on beans comparable to
Curtobacterium flaccumfaciens
. Isolates from the stratosphere (strain L6-1) and agricultural millet (G77) were identified to be the same species and designated as
Curtobacterium aetherium
sp. nov.
C. aetherium
displays high levels of tolerance to desiccation and UV radiation, which are stresses that increase in intensity with altitude. Back trajectory air mass analysis implied that the phytopathogens may have had an intercontinental source, but regional origins in the continental US cannot be excluded. The environmentally robust phytopathogens we have documented in the upper atmosphere provide new perspective on the role that high-altitude transport may play in microbial dispersal, gene flow, and the epidemiology of aerially dispersed plant disease.
IMPORTANCE
Enormous quantities and varieties of microorganisms are continually aerosolized and transported in the atmosphere, yet there is a limited understanding of the consequences to downwind ecosystems. While studying bacteria that survive extreme conditions at altitudes up to 29 km in the atmosphere, we discovered new species that have the capacity to cause disease in agriculturally relevant bean varieties. The hardiest isolate we characterized from the stratosphere is a member of the same species as an isolate from an agricultural source, which we have designated
Curtobacterium aetherium
.
C. aetherium
is a phytopathogen capable of enduring high-altitude and long-distance atmospheric transport while also possessing the potential to opportunistically infect crops in deposition locations.