scholarly journals Quorum-Sensing Mechanisms Mediated by Farnesol in Ophiostoma piceae: Effect on Secretion of Sterol Esterase

2015 ◽  
Vol 81 (13) ◽  
pp. 4351-4357 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felipe de Salas ◽  
María Jesús Martínez ◽  
Jorge Barriuso

ABSTRACTOphiostoma piceaeCECT 20416 is a dimorphic wood-staining fungus able to produce an extracellular sterol-esterase/lipase (OPE) that is of great biotechnological interest. In this work, we have studied the morphological change of this fungus from yeast to hyphae, which is associated with the cell density-related mechanism known as quorum sensing (QS), and how this affects the secretion of OPE. The data presented here confirm that the moleculeE,E-farnesol accumulates as the cell number is growing within the population. The exogenous addition of this molecule or spent medium to the cultures increased the extracellular activity of OPE 2.5 times. This fact was related not to an increase in microbial biomass or in the expression of the gene coding for OPE but to a marked morphological transition in the cultures. Moreover, the morphological transition also occurred when a high cell density was inoculated into the medium. The results suggest thatE,E-farnesol regulates through QS mechanisms the morphological transition in the dimorphic fungusO. piceaeand that it is associated with a higher extracellular esterase activity. Furthermore, identification and transcriptional analysis of genestup1andcyr1, which are involved in the response, was carried out. Here we report enhanced production of a sterol-esterase/lipase of biotechnological interest by means of QS mechanisms. These results may be useful in increasing the production of secreted enzymes of other dimorphic fungi of biotechnological interest.

2019 ◽  
Vol 201 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Zhou ◽  
Meizhen Wang ◽  
Nicole E. Smalley ◽  
Maxim Kostylev ◽  
Amy L. Schaefer ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Pseudomonas aeruginosa uses quorum sensing (QS) to regulate the production of a battery of secreted products. At least some of these products are shared among the population and serve as public goods. When P. aeruginosa is grown on casein as the sole carbon and energy source, the QS-induced extracellular protease elastase is required for growth. We isolated a P. aeruginosa variant, which showed increased production of QS-induced factors after repeated transfers in casein broth. This variant, P. aeruginosa QS*, had a mutation in the glutathione synthesis gene gshA. We describe several experiments that show a gshA coding variant and glutathione affect the QS response. The P. aeruginosa QS transcription factor LasR has a redox-sensitive cysteine (C79). We report that GshA variant cells with a LasR C79S substitution show a similar QS response to that of wild-type P. aeruginosa. Surprisingly, it is not LasR but the QS transcription factor RhlR that is more active in bacteria containing the variant gshA. Our results demonstrate that QS integrates information about cell density and the cellular redox state via glutathione levels. IMPORTANCE Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other bacteria coordinate group behaviors using a chemical communication system called quorum sensing (QS). The QS system of P. aeruginosa is complex, with several regulators and signals. We show that decreased levels of glutathione lead to increased gene activation in P. aeruginosa, which did not occur in a strain carrying the redox-insensitive variant of a transcription factor. The ability of P. aeruginosa QS transcription factors to integrate information about cell density and cellular redox state shows these transcription factors can fine-tune levels of the gene products they control in response to at least two types of signals or cues.


2020 ◽  
Vol 202 (14) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan R. Chaparian ◽  
Alyssa S. Ball ◽  
Julia C. van Kessel

ABSTRACT In vibrios, quorum sensing controls hundreds of genes that are required for cell density-specific behaviors including bioluminescence, biofilm formation, competence, secretion, and swarming motility. The central transcription factor in the quorum-sensing pathway is LuxR/HapR, which directly regulates ∼100 genes in the >400-gene regulon of Vibrio harveyi. Among these directly controlled genes are 15 transcription factors, which we predicted would comprise the second tier in the hierarchy of the LuxR regulon. We confirmed that LuxR binds to the promoters of these genes in vitro and quantified the extent of LuxR activation or repression of transcript levels. Transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) indicates that most of these transcriptional regulators control only a few genes, with the exception of MetJ, which is a global regulator. The genes regulated by these transcription factors are predicted to be involved in methionine and thiamine biosynthesis, membrane stability, RNA processing, c-di-GMP degradation, sugar transport, and other cellular processes. These data support a hierarchical model in which LuxR directly regulates 15 transcription factors that drive the second level of the gene expression cascade to influence cell density-dependent metabolic states and behaviors in V. harveyi. IMPORTANCE Quorum sensing is important for survival of bacteria in nature and influences the actions of bacterial groups. In the relatively few studied examples of quorum-sensing-controlled genes, these genes are associated with competition or cooperation in complex microbial communities and/or virulence in a host. However, quorum sensing in vibrios controls the expression of hundreds of genes, and their functions are mostly unknown or uncharacterized. In this study, we identify the regulators of the second tier of gene expression in the quorum-sensing system of the aquaculture pathogen Vibrio harveyi. Our identification of regulatory networks and metabolic pathways controlled by quorum sensing can be extended and compared to other Vibrio species to understand the physiology, ecology, and pathogenesis of these organisms.


2004 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 1356-1359 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob M. Hornby ◽  
Sarah M. Jacobitz-Kizzier ◽  
Donna J. McNeel ◽  
Ellen C. Jensen ◽  
David S. Treves ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We studied the inoculum size effect in Ceratocystis ulmi, the dimorphic fungus that causes Dutch elm disease. In a defined glucose-proline-salts medium, cells develop as budding yeasts when inoculated at ≥106 spores per ml and as mycelia when inoculated at <106 spores per ml. The inoculum size effect was not influenced by inoculum spore type, age of the spores, temperature, pH, oxygen availability, trace metals, sulfur source, phosphorous source, or the concentration of glucose or proline. Similarly, it was not influenced by added adenosine, reducing agents, methyl donors, amino sugars, fatty acids, or carbon dioxide. Instead, growing cells excreted an unknown quorum-sensing factor that caused a morphological shift from mycelia to budding yeasts. This yeast-promoting effect is abolished if it is extracted with an organic solvent such as ethyl acetate. The quorum-sensing activity acquired by the organic solvent could be added back to fresh medium in a dose-dependent fashion. The quorum-sensing activity in C. ulmi spent medium was specific for C. ulmi and had no effect on the dimorphic fungus Candida albicans or the photomorphogenic fungus Penicillium isariaeforme. In addition, farnesol, the quorum-sensing molecule produced by C. albicans, did not inhibit mycelial development of C. ulmi when present at concentrations of up to 100 μM. We conclude that the inoculum size effect is a manifestation of a quorum-sensing system that is mediated by an excreted extracellular molecule, and we suggest that quorum sensing is a general phenomenon in dimorphic fungi.


2015 ◽  
Vol 81 (15) ◽  
pp. 4984-4992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teng Chu ◽  
Yajun Huang ◽  
Mingyu Hou ◽  
Qiyao Wang ◽  
Jingfan Xiao ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe quorum sensing (QS) system, as a well-functioning population-dependent gene switch, has been widely applied in many gene circuits in synthetic biology. In our work, an efficient cell density-controlled expression system (QS) was established via engineering of theVibrio fischeri luxI-luxRquorum sensing system. In order to achievein vivoprogrammed gene expression, a synthetic binary regulation circuit (araQS) was constructed by assembling multiple genetic components, including the quorum quenching protein AiiA and the arabinose promoter ParaBAD, into the QS system.In vitroexpression assays verified that the araQS system was initiated only in the absence of arabinose in the medium at a high cell density.In vivoexpression assays confirmed that the araQS system presented anin vivo-triggered and cell density-dependent expression pattern. Furthermore, the araQS system was demonstrated to function well in different bacteria, indicating a wide range of bacterial hosts for use. To explore its potential applicationsin vivo, the araQS system was used to control the production of a heterologous protective antigen in an attenuatedEdwardsiella tardastrain, which successfully evoked efficient immune protection in a fish model. This work suggested that the araQS system could program bacterial expressionin vivoand might have potential uses, including, but not limited to, bacterial vector vaccines.


mBio ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ameya A. Mashruwala ◽  
Bonnie L. Bassler

ABSTRACT Quorum sensing is a chemical communication process in which bacteria use the production, release, and detection of signal molecules called autoinducers to orchestrate collective behaviors. The human pathogen Vibrio cholerae requires quorum sensing to infect the small intestine. There, V. cholerae encounters the absence of oxygen and the presence of bile salts. We show that these two stimuli differentially affect quorum-sensing function and, in turn, V. cholerae pathogenicity. First, during anaerobic growth, V. cholerae does not produce the CAI-1 autoinducer, while it continues to produce the DPO autoinducer, suggesting that CAI-1 may encode information specific to the aerobic lifestyle of V. cholerae. Second, the quorum-sensing receptor-transcription factor called VqmA, which detects the DPO autoinducer, also detects the lack of oxygen and the presence of bile salts. Detection occurs via oxygen-, bile salt-, and redox-responsive disulfide bonds that alter VqmA DNA binding activity. We propose that VqmA serves as an information processing hub that integrates quorum-sensing information, redox status, the presence or absence of oxygen, and host cues. In response to the information acquired through this mechanism, V. cholerae appropriately modulates its virulence output. IMPORTANCE Quorum sensing (QS) is a process of chemical communication that bacteria use to orchestrate collective behaviors. QS communication relies on chemical signal molecules called autoinducers. QS regulates virulence in Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of the disease cholera. Transit into the human small intestine, the site of cholera infection, exposes V. cholerae to the host environment. In this study, we show that the combination of two stimuli encountered in the small intestine, the absence of oxygen and the presence of host-produced bile salts, impinge on V. cholerae QS function and, in turn, pathogenicity. We suggest that possessing a QS system that is responsive to multiple environmental, host, and cell density cues enables V. cholerae to fine-tune its virulence capacity in the human intestine.


2019 ◽  
Vol 201 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Colleen E. Harty ◽  
Dorival Martins ◽  
Georgia Doing ◽  
Dallas L. Mould ◽  
Michelle E. Clay ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTPseudomonas aeruginosafrequently resides among ethanol-producing microbes, making its response to the microbially produced concentrations of ethanol relevant to understanding its biology. Our transcriptome analysis found that genes involved in trehalose metabolism were induced by low concentrations of ethanol, and biochemical assays showed that levels of intracellular trehalose increased significantly upon growth with ethanol. The increase in trehalose was dependent on the TreYZ pathway but not other trehalose-metabolic enzymes (TreS or TreA). The sigma factor AlgU (AlgT), a homolog of RpoE in other species, was required for increased expression of thetreZgene and trehalose levels, but induction was not controlled by the well-characterized proteolysis of its anti-sigma factor, MucA. Growth with ethanol led to increased SpoT-dependent (p)ppGpp accumulation, which stimulates AlgU-dependent transcription oftreZand other AlgU-regulated genes through DksA, a (p)ppGpp and RNA polymerase binding protein. Ethanol stimulation of trehalose also required acylhomoserine lactone (AHL)-mediated quorum sensing (QS), as induction was not observed in a ΔlasRΔrhlRstrain. A network analysis using a model, eADAGE, built from publicly availableP. aeruginosatranscriptome data sets (J. Tan, G. Doing, K. A. Lewis, C. E. Price, et al., Cell Syst 5:63–71, 2017, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cels.2017.06.003) provided strong support for our model in whichtreZand coregulated genes are controlled by both AlgU- and AHL-mediated QS. Consistent with (p)ppGpp- and AHL-mediated quorum-sensing regulation, ethanol, even when added at the time of culture inoculation, stimulatedtreZtranscript levels and trehalose production in cells from post-exponential-phase cultures but not in cells from exponential-phase cultures. These data highlight the integration of growth and cell density cues in theP. aeruginosatranscriptional response to ethanol.IMPORTANCEPseudomonas aeruginosais often found with bacteria and fungi that produce fermentation products, including ethanol. At concentrations similar to those produced by environmental microbes, we found that ethanol stimulated expression of trehalose-biosynthetic genes and cellular levels of trehalose, a disaccharide that protects against environmental stresses. The induction of trehalose by ethanol required the alternative sigma factor AlgU through DksA- and SpoT-dependent (p)ppGpp. Trehalose accumulation also required AHL quorum sensing and occurred only in post-exponential-phase cultures. This work highlights how cells integrate cell density and growth cues in their responses to products made by other microbes and reveals a new role for (p)ppGpp in the regulation of AlgU activity.


2013 ◽  
Vol 81 (8) ◽  
pp. 2888-2898 ◽  
Author(s):  
In Hwang Kim ◽  
Yancheng Wen ◽  
Jee-Soo Son ◽  
Kyu-Ho Lee ◽  
Kun-Soo Kim

ABSTRACTThe genevvpE, encoding the virulence factor elastase, is a member of the quorum-sensing regulon inVibrio vulnificusand displays enhanced expression at high cell density. We observed that this gene was repressed under iron-rich conditions and that the repression was due to a Fur (ferricuptakeregulator)-dependent repression ofsmcR, a gene encoding a quorum-sensing master regulator with similarity toluxRinVibrio harveyi. A gel mobility shift assay and a footprinting experiment demonstrated that the Fur-iron complex binds directly to two regions upstream ofsmcR(−82 to −36 and −2 to +27, with respect to the transcription start site) with differing affinities. However, binding of the Fur-iron complex is reversible enough to allow expression ofsmcRto be induced by quorum sensing at high cell density under iron-rich conditions. Under iron-limiting conditions, Fur fails to bind either region and the expression ofsmcRis regulated solely by quorum sensing. These results suggest that two biologically important environmental signals, iron and quorum sensing, converge to direct the expression ofsmcR, which then coordinates the expression of virulence factors.


mBio ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Demeng Tan ◽  
Sine Lo Svenningsen ◽  
Mathias Middelboe

ABSTRACTSelection for phage resistance is a key driver of bacterial diversity and evolution, and phage-host interactions may therefore have strong influence on the genetic and functional dynamics of bacterial communities. In this study, we found that an important, but so far largely overlooked, determinant of the outcome of phage-bacterial encounters in the fish pathogenVibrio anguillarumis bacterial cell-cell communication, known as quorum sensing. Specifically,V. anguillarumPF430-3 cells locked in the low-cell-density state (ΔvanTmutant) express high levels of the phage receptor OmpK, resulting in a high susceptibility to phage KVP40, but achieve protection from infection by enhanced biofilm formation. By contrast, cells locked in the high-cell-density state (ΔvanΟmutant) are almost completely unsusceptible due to quorum-sensing-mediated downregulation of OmpK expression. The phenotypes of the two quorum-sensing mutant strains are accurately reflected in the behavior of wild-typeV. anguillarum, which (i) displays increased OmpK expression in aggregated cells compared to free-living variants in the same culture, (ii) displays a clear inverse correlation betweenompKmRNA levels and the concentration ofN-acylhomoserine lactone quorum-sensing signals in the culture medium, and (iii) survives mainly by one of these two defense mechanisms, rather than by genetic mutation to phage resistance. Taken together, our results demonstrate thatV. anguillarumemploys quorum-sensing information to choose between two complementary antiphage defense strategies. Further, the prevalence of nonmutational defense mechanisms in strain PF430-3 suggests highly flexible adaptations to KVP40 phage infection pressure, possibly allowing the long-term coexistence of phage and host.IMPORTANCEComprehensive knowledge on bacterial antiphage strategies and their regulation is essential for understanding the role of phages as drivers of bacterial evolution and diversity. In an applied context, development of successful phage-based control of bacterial pathogens also requires detailed understanding of the mechanisms of phage protection in pathogenic bacteria. Here, we demonstrate for the first time the presence of quorum-sensing-regulated phage defense mechanisms in the fish pathogenVibrio anguillarumand provide evidence that quorum-sensing regulation allowsV. anguillarumto alternate between different phage protection mechanisms depending on population cell density. Further, our results demonstrate the prevalence of nonmutational defense mechanisms in the investigatedV. anguillarumstrain, which allow flexible adaptations to a dynamic phage infection pressure.


2018 ◽  
Vol 84 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiating Gao ◽  
Xuetong Wang ◽  
Qiaoqiao Mao ◽  
Rongjing Xu ◽  
Xiaohui Zhou ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The quorum sensing (QS) system controls bacterial group behaviors in response to cell density. In vibrios, LuxR and AphA are two master QS regulators (MQSRs) controlling gene expression in response to high or low cell density. Other regulators involved in the regulation of these two MQSRs and QS pathways remain to be determined. Here, we performed bacterial one-hybrid (B1H)-assay-based screens of transcriptional factors (TFs) to identify TFs that can directly regulate the expression of luxR and aphA from a library of 285 TFs encoded by the fish pathogen Vibrio alginolyticus. A total of 7 TFs were identified to bind to the promoters of both luxR and aphA. Among these TFs, the novel LysR-type transcriptional regulator (LTTR) VqsA could activate LuxR and repress AphA transcription. Meanwhile, LuxR and AphA exerted feedback inhibition and activation of vqsA expression, respectively, indicating that VqsA coordinates QS and is also regulated by QS. In addition, VqsA inhibited its own expression by directly binding to its own promoter region. The VqsA-binding sites in the promoter regions of luxR and aphA as well as the binding sites of LuxR, AphA, and VqsA in the vqsA gene were uncovered by electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs) and DNase I footprinting analysis. Finally, VqsA was verified to play essential roles in QS-regulated phenotypes, i.e., type VI secretion system 2 (T6SS2)-dependent interbacterial competition, biofilm formation, exotoxin production, and in vivo virulence of V. alginolyticus. Collectively, our data showed that VqsA is an important QS regulator in V. alginolyticus. IMPORTANCE Investigation of the mechanism of regulation of quorum sensing (QS) systems will facilitate an understanding of bacterial pathogenesis and the identification of effective QS interference (QSI) targets. Here, we systematically screened transcriptional factors (TFs) that modulate the expression of the master QS regulators (MQSRs) LuxR and AphA, and a novel LysR-type transcriptional regulator, VqsA, was identified. Our data illuminated the mechanisms mediating the interaction among LuxR, AphA, and VqsA as well as the effects of these regulators on the expression and output of QS. The impaired expression of virulence genes as a result of vqsA disruption demonstrated that VqsA is an important player in QS regulation and pathogenesis and may be the third MQSR involved in sensing environmental signals by vibrios to coordinate QS responses. This study will facilitate the development of strategies to interfere with QS and effectively control this pathogen that plagues the aquaculture industry.


2016 ◽  
Vol 198 (21) ◽  
pp. 2985-2999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Gu ◽  
Huan Liu ◽  
Zhen Yang ◽  
Yuanxing Zhang ◽  
Qiyao Wang

ABSTRACTQuorum sensing (QS) is an important regulatory system in virulence expression and environmental adaptation in bacteria. The master QS regulators (MQSR) LuxR and AphA reciprocally control QS gene expression in vibrios. However, the molecular basis for the regulatory functions of AphA remains undefined. In this study, we characterized its regulatory roles inVibrio alginolyticus, an important zoonotic pathogen causing diseases in marine animals as well as in humans. AphA is involved in the motility ability, biofilm formation, andin vivosurvival ofV. alginolyticus. Specifically, AphA is expressed at low-cell-density growth phases. In addition, AphA negatively regulates the expression of the main virulence factor, alkaline serine protease (Asp), through LuxR. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) followed by high-throughput DNA sequencing (ChIP-seq) detected 49 enriched loci harboring AphA-binding peaks across theV. alginolyticusgenome. An AphA-specific binding motif was identified and further confirmed by electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) and mutagenesis analysis. A quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) assay further validated the regulation of AphA on these genes. AphA binds directly to theaphApromoter and negatively regulates its own expression. Moreover, AphA directly regulates genes encoding adenylate cyclase, anti-σD, FabR, and the small RNA CsrB, revealing versatile regulatory roles of AphA in its physiology and virulence. Furthermore, our data indicated that AphA modulates motility through the coordinated function of LuxR and CsrB. Collectively, the findings of this work contribute to better understanding of the regulatory roles of AphA in QS and non-QS genes.IMPORTANCEIn this work, we determined that AphA, the master regulator of QS at low cell density, plays essential roles in expression of genes associated with physiology and virulence inV. alginolyticus, a Gram-negative pathogen for humans and marine animals. We further uncovered that 49 genes could be directly regulated by AphA and a 19-bp consensus binding sequence was identified. Among the 49 genes, the QS and other non-QS-associated genes were identified to be regulated by AphA. Besides, the small RNA CsrB was negatively regulated by AphA, and AphA regulate motility abilities through both CsrB and LuxR. Taken together, the findings of this study improve our understanding of the complex regulation network of AphA and QS.


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