19 Author Contributions: JR and LRS conceived of the study. JR designed and conducted 20 molecular protocols and lab experiments. LRS conducted computational analyses and 21 performed experiments. JR, LRS and RK interpreted experimental data. JR and LRS 22 wrote the first draft of the manuscript, and JR, LRS and RK added critical revisions. 23 2 24 Data Deposition Statement: Analysis scripts and input files associated with 25 reconstruction of phylogenetic trees are available at 26 https://github.com/lshapiro31/gh5.expansin.phylogenetics 27 3 Abstract 28All land plants depend on proteins called 'expansins' that non-enzymatically loosen structural 29 cellulose, enabling cell wall extension during normal growth. Surprisingly, expansin genes are 30 also present -but functionally uncharacterized -in taxonomically diverse bacteria and fungi that 31 do not produce cellulosic cell walls. Here, we find that Erwinia tracheiphila 32 (Enterobacteriaceae), the causative agent of bacterial wilt of cucurbits, has horizontally acquired 33 an operon with a microbial expansin (exlx) gene and a glycoside hydrolase family 5 (gh5) gene. 34 E. tracheiphila is an unusually virulent plant pathogen that induces systemic wilt symptoms 35 followed by plant death, and has only recently emerged into cultivated cucurbit populations in 36 temperate Eastern North America. Plant inoculation experiments with deletion mutants show that 37 EXLX-GH5 is a secreted virulence factor that confers efficient xylem movement and 38 colonization ability to E. tracheiphila. Bacterial colonization of xylem blocks sap flow, inducing 39 wilt symptoms and causing plant death. Together, these results suggest that the horizontal 40 acquisition of the exlx-gh5 locus was likely a key step driving the recent emergence of E. 41 tracheiphila. The increase in E. tracheiphila virulence conferred by microbial expansins, the 42 presence of this gene in many other bacterial and fungal wilt-inducing plant pathogen species, 43 and the amenability of microbial expansins to horizontal gene transfer suggest this gene may be 44 an under-appreciated virulence factor in taxonomically diverse agricultural pathogens. 45 46 4 Importance 47Erwinia tracheiphila is a bacterial plant pathogen that causes a fatal wilt infection in cucurbit 48 crop plants. Here, we report that E. tracheiphila has horizontally acquired a microbial expansin 49 gene (exlx) adjacent to a glycoside hydrolase family 5 (gh5) gene. Expansins are predominantly 50 associated with plants due to their essential role in loosening structural cell wall cellulose during 51 normal growth. We find that the EXLX and GH5 proteins in E. tracheiphila function as a single 52 complex to facilitate xylem colonization, possibly by manipulating the size of xylem structures 53 that normally exclude the passage of bacteria. This suggests that horizontal acquisition of the 54 exlx-gh5 locus was likely a key step in the recent emergence of E. tracheiphila as an unusually 55 virulent plant pathogen. The presence of microbial expansin gene...