Pseudomonas aeruginosa
, an opportunistic bacterial pathogen can synthesize and catabolize a number of small cationic molecules known as polyamines. In several clades of bacteria polyamines regulate biofilm formation, a lifestyle-switching process that confers resistance to environmental stress. The polyamine putrescine and its biosynthetic precursors, L-arginine and agmatine, promote biofilm formation in
Pseudomonas
spp. However, it remains unclear whether the effect is a direct effect of polyamines or through a metabolic derivative. Here we used a genetic approach to demonstrate that putrescine accumulation, either through disruption of the spermidine biosynthesis pathway or the catabolic putrescine aminotransferase pathway, promoted biofilm formation in
P. aeruginosa
. Consistent with this observation, exogenous putrescine robustly induced biofilm formation in
P. aeruginosa
that was dependent on putrescine uptake and biosynthesis pathways. Additionally, we show that L-arginine, the biosynthetic precursor of putrescine, also promoted biofilm formation, but via a mechanism independent of putrescine or agmatine conversion. We found that both putrescine and L-arginine induced a significant increase in the intracellular level of bis-(3′-5′)-cyclic dimeric guanosine monophosphate (c-di-GMP) (c-di-GMP), a bacterial second messenger widely found in Proteobacteria that upregulates biofilm formation. Collectively these data show that putrescine and its metabolic precursor arginine promote biofilm and c-di-GMP synthesis in
P. aeruginosa
.
Importance:
Biofilm formation allows bacteria to physically attach to a surface, confers tolerance to antimicrobial agents, and promotes resistance to host immune responses. As a result, regulation of biofilm is often crucial for bacterial pathogens to establish chronic infections. A primary mechanism of biofilm promotion in bacteria is the molecule c-di-GMP, which promotes biofilm formation. The level of c-di-GMP is tightly regulated by bacterial enzymes. In this study, we found that putrescine, a small molecule ubiquitously found in eukaryotic cells, robustly enhances
P. aeruginosa
biofilm and c-di-GMP. We propose that
P. aeruginosa
may sense putrescine as a host-associated signal that triggers a lifestyle switching that favors chronic infection.