Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Contact-dependent growth inhibition (CDI) is a mechanism identified in
Escherichia coli
by which bacteria expressing two-partner secretion proteins encoded by
cdiA
and
cdiB
bind to BamA in the outer membranes of target cells and inhibit their growth. A third gene in the cluster,
cdiI
, encodes a small protein that is necessary and sufficient to confer immunity to CDI, thereby preventing cells expressing the
cdiBA
genes from inhibiting their own growth. In this study, the
cdiI
gene was placed under
araBAD
promoter control to modulate levels of the immunity protein and thereby induce CDI by removal of arabinose. This CDI autoinhibition system was used for metabolic analyses of a single population of
E. coli
cells undergoing CDI. Contact-inhibited cells showed altered cell morphology, including the presence of filaments. Notably, CDI was reversible, as evidenced by resumption of cell growth and normal cellular morphology following induction of the CdiI immunity protein. Recovery of cells from CDI also required an energy source. Cells undergoing CDI showed a significant, reversible downregulation of metabolic parameters, including aerobic respiration, proton motive force (Δp), and steady-state ATP levels. It is unclear whether the decrease in respiration and/or Δp is directly involved in growth inhibition, but a role for ATP in the CDI mechanism was ruled out using an
atp
mutant. Consistent with the observed decrease in Δp, the phage shock response was induced in cells undergoing CDI but not in recovering cells, based on analysis of levels of
pspA
mRNA.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
88 articles.
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