Affiliation:
1. Institute of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We recently discovered that exposure of enterohemorrhagic
Escherichia coli
(EHEC) to
d
-serine resulted in accumulation of this unusual amino acid, induction of the SOS regulon, and downregulation of the type III secretion system that is essential for efficient colonization of the host. Here, we have investigated the physiological relevance of this elevated SOS response, which is of particular interest given the presence of Stx toxin-carrying lysogenic prophages on the EHEC chromosome that are activated during the SOS response. We found that RecA elevation in response to
d
-serine, while being significant, was heterogeneous and not capable of activating
stx
expression or
stx
phage transduction to a nonlysogenic recipient. This “SOS-like response” was, however, capable of increasing the mutation frequency associated with low-level RecA activity, thus promoting genetic diversity. Furthermore, this response was entirely dependent on RecA and enhanced in the presence of a DNA-damaging agent, indicating a functional SOS response, but did not result in observable cleavage of the LexA repressor alone, indicating a controlled mechanism of induction. This work demonstrates that environmental factors not usually associated with DNA damage are capable of promoting an SOS-like response. We propose that this modulated induction of RecA allows EHEC to adapt to environmental insults such as
d
-serine while avoiding unwanted phage-induced lysis.
IMPORTANCE
The SOS response is a global stress network that is triggered by the presence of DNA damage due to breakage or stalled replication forks. Activation of the SOS response can trigger the replication of lytic bacteriophages and promote genetic diversification through error-prone polymerases. We have demonstrated that the host-associated metabolite
d
-serine contributes to
Escherichia coli
niche specification and accumulates inside cells that cannot catabolize it. This results in a modulated activation of the SOS antirepressor RecA that is insufficient to trigger lytic bacteriophage but capable of increasing the SOS-associated mutation frequency. These findings describe how relevant signals not normally associated with DNA damage can hijack the SOS response, promoting diversity as
E. coli
strains adapt while avoiding unwanted phage lysis.
Funder
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
10 articles.
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