Abstract
AbstractQuorum sensing (QS) are intercellular communication mechanisms to coordinate bacterial gene expression in response to signaling molecules. In Bacillus thuringiensis the QS system NprR-NprRB (receptor protein-signaling peptide) regulates the expression of genes related to nutrient scavenging during necrotrophism and also modulates sporulation onset. However, the relevance of QS in free-living stages of B. thuringiensis is less known. In this work, we depict the contribution of this QS system to spreading in colony biofilms. Through a spreading assay in spotted colonies of B. thuringiensis Bt8741 Wt and derived mutants, we find that the spreading phenotype depends on the NprR regulator and on the extracellular signaling NprRB peptide. We also show that this phenotype is associated to an increased fitness of the bacterium in these experimental conditions. Exogenous addition of a lipopeptide surfactant was sufficient to recover spreading in the ΔnprR-nprRB mutant, indicating that the phenotype could be mediated by the lipopeptide kurstakin. Finally, we suggest that the spreading is relevant in nature, since it occurs in the sole presence of soil nutrients, and it is conserved in several species of Bacillus commonly found in soil. This novel function of NprR-NprRB highlights the relevance of this QS system on the evolution and on the free-lifestyle ecology of B. thuringiensis.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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