Affiliation:
1. Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Free extracellular DNA is abundant in many aquatic environments. While much of this DNA will be degraded by nucleases secreted by the surrounding microbial community, some is available as transforming material that can be taken up by naturally competent bacteria. One such species is
Vibrio cholerae
, an autochthonous member of estuarine, riverine, and marine habitats and the causative agent of cholera, whose competence program is induced after colonization of chitin surfaces. In this study, we investigate how
Vibrio cholerae
's two extracellular nucleases, Xds and Dns, influence its natural transformability. We show that in the absence of Dns, transformation frequencies are significantly higher than in its presence. During growth on a chitin surface, an increase in transformation efficiency was found to correspond in time with increasing cell density and the repression of
dns
expression by the quorum-sensing regulator HapR. In contrast, at low cell density, the absence of HapR relieves
dns
repression, leading to the degradation of free DNA and to the abrogation of the transformation phenotype. Thus, as cell density increases,
Vibrio cholerae
undergoes a switch from nuclease-mediated degradation of extracellular DNA to the uptake of DNA by bacteria induced to a state of competence by chitin. Taken together, these results suggest the following model: nuclease production by low-density populations of
V. cholerae
might foster rapid growth by providing a source of nucleotides for the repletion of nucleotide pools. In contrast, the termination of nuclease production by static, high-density populations allows the uptake of intact DNA and coincides with a phase of potential genome diversification.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
119 articles.
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