Affiliation:
1. Département de Microbiologie Fondamentale, Université de Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
,
N
-acylhomoserine lactone signals regulate the expression of several hundreds of genes, via the transcriptional regulator LasR and, in part, also via the subordinate regulator RhlR. This regulatory network termed quorum sensing contributes to the virulence of
P. aeruginosa
as a pathogen. The fact that two supposed PAO1 wild-type strains from strain collections were found to be defective for LasR function because of independent point mutations in the
lasR
gene led to the hypothesis that loss of quorum sensing might confer a selective advantage on
P. aeruginosa
under certain environmental conditions. A convenient plate assay for LasR function was devised, based on the observation that
lasR
mutants did not grow on adenosine as the sole carbon source because a key degradative enzyme, nucleoside hydrolase (Nuh), is positively controlled by LasR. The wild-type PAO1 and
lasR
mutants showed similar growth rates when incubated in nutrient yeast broth at pH 6.8 and 37°C with good aeration. However, after termination of growth during 30 to 54 h of incubation, when the pH rose to ≥ 9, the
lasR
mutants were significantly more resistant to cell lysis and death than was the wild type. As a consequence, the
lasR
mutant-to-wild-type ratio increased about 10-fold in mixed cultures incubated for 54 h. In a PAO1 culture, five consecutive cycles of 48 h of incubation sufficed to enrich for about 10% of spontaneous mutants with a Nuh
−
phenotype, and five of these mutants, which were functionally complemented by
lasR
+
, had mutations in
lasR
. The observation that, in buffered nutrient yeast broth, the wild type and
lasR
mutants exhibited similar low tendencies to undergo cell lysis and death suggests that alkaline stress may be a critical factor providing a selective survival advantage to
lasR
mutants.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology