scholarly journals Quorum sensing in Vibrio cholerae?

2002 ◽  
Vol 3 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wim D'Haeze
Cell ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 110 (3) ◽  
pp. 303-314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa B. Miller ◽  
Karen Skorupski ◽  
Derrick H. Lenz ◽  
Ronald K. Taylor ◽  
Bonnie L. Bassler

2008 ◽  
Vol 190 (7) ◽  
pp. 2527-2536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher M. Waters ◽  
Wenyun Lu ◽  
Joshua D. Rabinowitz ◽  
Bonnie L. Bassler

ABSTRACT Two chemical signaling systems, quorum sensing (QS) and 3′,5′-cyclic diguanylic acid (c-di-GMP), reciprocally control biofilm formation in Vibrio cholerae. QS is the process by which bacteria communicate via the secretion and detection of autoinducers, and in V. cholerae, QS represses biofilm formation. c-di-GMP is an intracellular second messenger that contains information regarding local environmental conditions, and in V. cholerae, c-di-GMP activates biofilm formation. Here we show that HapR, a major regulator of QS, represses biofilm formation in V. cholerae through two distinct mechanisms. HapR controls the transcription of 14 genes encoding a group of proteins that synthesize and degrade c-di-GMP. The net effect of this transcriptional program is a reduction in cellular c-di-GMP levels at high cell density and, consequently, a decrease in biofilm formation. Increasing the c-di-GMP concentration at high cell density to the level present in the low-cell-density QS state restores biofilm formation, showing that c-di-GMP is epistatic to QS in the control of biofilm formation in V. cholerae. In addition, HapR binds to and directly represses the expression of the biofilm transcriptional activator, vpsT. Together, our results suggest that V. cholerae integrates information about the vicinal bacterial community contained in extracellular QS autoinducers with the intracellular environmental information encoded in c-di-GMP to control biofilm formation.


2006 ◽  
Vol 188 (7) ◽  
pp. 2446-2453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhi Liu ◽  
Ansel Hsiao ◽  
Adam Joelsson ◽  
Jun Zhu

ABSTRACT Vibrio cholerae is the causative agent of the severe diarrheal disease cholera. A number of environmental stimuli regulate virulence gene expression in V. cholerae, including quorum-sensing signals. At high cell densities, quorum sensing in V. cholerae invokes a series of signal transduction pathways in order to activate the expression of the master regulator HapR, which then represses the virulence regulon and biofilm-related genes and activates protease production. In this study, we identified a transcriptional regulator, VqmA (VCA1078), that activates hapR expression at low cell densities. Under in vitro inducing conditions, constitutive expression of VqmA represses the virulence regulon in a HapR-dependent manner. VqmA increases hapR transcription as measured by the activity of the hapR-lacZ reporter, and it increases HapR production as measured by Western blotting. Using a heterogenous luxCDABE cosmid, we found that VqmA stimulates quorum-sensing regulation at lower cell densities and that this stimulation bypasses the known LuxO-small-RNA regulatory circuits. Furthermore, we showed that VqmA regulates hapR transcription directly by binding to its promoter region and that expression of vqmA is cell density dependent and autoregulated. The physiological role of VqmA is also discussed.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew A. Bridges ◽  
Bonnie L. Bassler

AbstractVibrio cholerae possesses multiple quorum-sensing systems that control virulence and biofilm formation among other traits. At low cell densities, when quorum-sensing autoinducers are absent, V. cholerae forms biofilms. At high cell densities, when autoinducers have accumulated, biofilm formation is repressed and dispersal occurs. Here, we focus on the roles of two well-characterized quorum-sensing autoinducers that function in parallel. One autoinducer, called CAI-1, is used to measure vibrio abundance, and the other autoinducer, called AI-2, is a broadly-made universal autoinducer that is presumed to enable V. cholerae to assess the total bacterial cell density of the vicinal community. The two V. cholerae autoinducers funnel information into a shared signal relay pathway. This feature of the quorum-sensing system architecture has made it difficult to understand how specific information can be extracted from each autoinducer, how the autoinducers might drive distinct output behaviors, and in turn, how the bacteria use quorum sensing to distinguish self from other in bacterial communities. We develop a live-cell biofilm formation and dispersal assay that allows examination of the individual and combined roles of the two autoinducers in controlling V. cholerae behavior. We show that the quorum-sensing system works as a coincidence detector in which both autoinducers must be present simultaneously for repression of biofilm formation to occur. Within that context, the CAI-1 quorum-sensing pathway is activated when only a few V. cholerae cells are present, whereas the AI-2 pathway is activated only at much higher cell density. The consequence of this asymmetry is that exogenous sources of AI-2, but not CAI-1, contribute to satisfying the coincidence detector to repress biofilm formation and promote dispersal. We propose that V. cholerae uses CAI-1 to verify that some of its kin are present before committing to the high-cell-density quorum-sensing mode, but it is, in fact, the universal autoinducer AI-2, that sets the pace of the V. cholerae quorum-sensing program. This first report of unique roles for the different V. cholerae autoinducers suggests that detection of self fosters a distinct outcome from detection of other.


2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lark J. Perez ◽  
Theodora K. Karagounis ◽  
Amanda Hurley ◽  
Bonnie L. Bassler ◽  
Martin F. Semmelhack

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