Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In a process called quorum sensing, bacteria communicate using extracellular signal molecules termed autoinducers. Two parallel quorum-sensing systems have been identified in the marine bacterium
Vibrio harveyi
. System 1 consists of the LuxM-dependent autoinducer HAI-1 and the HAI-1 sensor, LuxN. System 2 consists of the LuxS-dependent autoinducer AI-2 and the AI-2 detector, LuxPQ. The related bacterium,
Vibrio cholerae
, a human pathogen, possesses System 2 (LuxS, AI-2, and LuxPQ) but does not have obvious homologues of
V. harveyi
System 1. Rather, System 1 of
V. cholerae
is made up of the CqsA-dependent autoinducer CAI-1 and a sensor called CqsS. Using a
V. cholerae
CAI-1 reporter strain we show that many other marine bacteria, including
V. harveyi
, produce CAI-1 activity. Genetic analysis of
V. harveyi
reveals
cqsA
and
cqsS
, and phenotypic analysis of
V. harveyi cqsA
and
cqsS
mutants shows that these functions comprise a third
V. harveyi
quorum-sensing system that acts in parallel to Systems 1 and 2. Together these communication systems act as a three-way coincidence detector in the regulation of a variety of genes, including those responsible for bioluminescence, type III secretion, and metalloprotease production.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
471 articles.
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