Literature DB >> 23823498

You are what you talk: quorum sensing induces individual morphologies and cell division modes in Dinoroseobacter shibae.

Diana Patzelt1, Hui Wang, Ina Buchholz, Manfred Rohde, Lothar Gröbe, Silke Pradella, Alexander Neumann, Stefan Schulz, Steffi Heyber, Karin Münch, Richard Münch, Dieter Jahn, Irene Wagner-Döbler, Jürgen Tomasch.   

Abstract

Dinoroseobacter shibae, a member of the Roseobacter clade abundant in marine environments, is characterized by a pronounced pleomorphism. Cell shapes range from variable-sized ovoid rods to long filaments with a high copy number of chromosomes. Time-lapse microscopy shows cells dividing either by binary fission or by budding from the cell poles. Here we demonstrate that this morphological heterogeneity is induced by quorum sensing (QS). D. shibae utilizes three acylated homoserine lactone (AHL) synthases (luxI1-3) to produce AHLs with unsaturated C18 side chains. A ΔluxI1-knockout strain completely lacking AHL biosynthesis was uniform in morphology and divided by binary fission only. Transcriptome analysis revealed that expression of genes responsible for control of cell division was reduced in this strain, providing the link between QS and the observed phenotype. In addition, flagellar biosynthesis and type IV secretion system (T4SS) were downregulated. The wild-type phenotype and gene expression could be restored through addition of synthetic C18-AHLs. Their effectiveness was dependent on the number of double bonds in the acyl side chain and the regulated trait. The wild-type expression level of T4SS genes was fully restored even by an AHL with a saturated C18 side chain that has not been detected in D. shibae. QS induces phenotypic individualization of D. shibae cells rather than coordinating the population. This strategy might be beneficial in unpredictably changing environments, for example, during algal blooms when resource competition and grazing exert fluctuating selective pressures. A specific response towards non-native AHLs might provide D. shibae with the capacity for complex interspecies communication.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23823498      PMCID: PMC3834844          DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2013.107

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ISME J        ISSN: 1751-7362            Impact factor:   10.302


  64 in total

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9.  Discovery of complex mixtures of novel long-chain quorum sensing signals in free-living and host-associated marine alphaproteobacteria.

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  31 in total

Review 1.  Potential Emergence of Multi-quorum Sensing Inhibitor Resistant (MQSIR) Bacteria.

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Review 4.  Quorum Sensing and Quorum Quenching in the Phycosphere of Phytoplankton: a Case of Chemical Interactions in Ecology.

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5.  Impact of Quorum Sensing and Tropodithietic Acid Production on the Exometabolome of Phaeobacter inhibens.

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Review 6.  The Molecular Basis of Noncanonical Bacterial Morphology.

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Review 7.  Acyl-homoserine lactone quorum sensing in the Roseobacter clade.

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Review 9.  Acyl-homoserine lactone-based quorum sensing in the Roseobacter clade: complex cell-to-cell communication controls multiple physiologies.

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10.  The CtrA phosphorelay integrates differentiation and communication in the marine alphaproteobacterium Dinoroseobacter shibae.

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