Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Loyola University Chicago, Maywood, Illinois 60153
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The light organ of the squid
Euprymna scolopes
is specifically colonized to a high density by the marine bacterium
Vibrio fischeri
. To date, only a few factors contributing to the specificity of this symbiosis have been identified. Using a genetic screen for random transposon mutants defective in initiating the symbiotic association or in colonizing the light organ to high density, we identified a mutant of
V. fischeri
that exhibited an apparent defect in symbiosis initiation. This mutant was not defective in motility, luminescence, or growth in minimal medium, suggesting that it lacks an essential, previously unidentified symbiotic function. By sequence analysis, we showed that the locus inactivated in this mutant encodes a predicted 927-amino-acid protein with a high degree of similarity to the sensor component of hybrid two-component regulatory systems. We have therefore designated this locus
rscS
, for regulator of symbiotic colonization—sensor. Sequence analysis revealed two hydrophobic regions which may result in the formation of a periplasmic loop involved in signal recognition; PhoA fusion data supported this proposed membrane topology. We have investigated the start site of
rscS
transcription by primer extension and identified a putative promoter region. We hypothesize that RscS recognizes a signal associated with the light organ environment and responds by stimulating a putative response regulator that controls protein function or gene expression to coordinate early colonization events. Further studies on RscS, its cognate response regulator, and the signaling conditions will provide important insight into the interaction between
V. fischeri
and
E. scolopes
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
91 articles.
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