Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Molecular and Cellular Biology Program, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Many bacteria possess cell density-dependent quorum-sensing (QS) systems that often regulate cooperative secretions involved in host-microbe or microbe-microbe interactions. These secretions, or “public goods,” are frequently coregulated by stress and starvation responses. Here we provide a physiological rationale for such regulatory complexity in the opportunistic pathogen
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
. Using minimal-medium batch and chemostat cultures, we comprehensively characterized specific growth rate-limiting macronutrients as key triggers for the expression of extracellular enzymes and metabolites directly controlled by the
las
and
rhl
QS systems. Expression was unrelated to cell density, depended on the secreted product's elemental composition, and was induced only when the limiting nutrient was not also a building block of the product;
rhl
-dependent products showed the strongest response, caused by the largely
las
-independent induction of the regulator RhlR and its cognate signal. In agreement with the prominent role of the
rhl
system, slow growth inverted the
las
-to-
rhl
signal ratio, previously considered a characteristic distinguishing between planktonic and biofilm lifestyles. Our results highlight a supply-driven, metabolically prudent regulation of public goods that minimizes production costs and thereby helps stabilize cooperative behavior. Such regulation would be beneficial for QS-dependent public goods that act broadly and nonspecifically, and whose need cannot always be accurately assessed by the producing cell. Clear differences in the capacities of the
las
and
rhl
systems to integrate starvation signals help explain the existence of multiple QS systems in one cell.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
82 articles.
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