Abstract
AbstractMicrobes rarely exist in isolation, and instead form complex polymicrobial communities. As a result, microbes have developed intricate offensive and defensive strategies that enhance their fitness in these complex communities. Thus, identifying and understanding the molecular mechanisms controlling polymicrobial interactions is critical for understanding the function of microbial communities. In this study, we show that the Gram-negative opportunistic human pathogenPseudomonas aeruginosa, which frequently causes infection alongside a plethora of other microbes including fungi, encodes a genetic network which can detect, and defend against gliotoxin, a potent, disulfide-containing antimicrobial produced by the ubiquitous filamentous fungusAspergillus fumigatus. We show that gliotoxin exposure disruptsP. aeruginosazinc homeostasis, leading to transcriptional activation of a gene encoding a previously uncharacterized dithiol oxidase (DnoP), which detoxifies gliotoxin and structurally related toxins. While the enzymatic activity of DnoP is identical to that used byA. fumigatusto protect itself against gliotoxin, DnoP shares little homology to theA. fumigatusgliotoxin resistance protein. Thus, DnoP and its transcriptional induction by low zinc represent an example of both convergent evolution of toxin defense and environmental cue sensing across kingdoms. Collectively, these data support disulfide-containing natural products as mediators of inter-kingdom interactions and provide evidence thatP. aeruginosahas evolved to survive exposure to these molecules in the natural environment.Significance statementBacteria and fungi frequently exist as complex, polymicrobial communities during infection. Reconstructing ecological structure in the laboratory is challenging and, consequently, the precise molecular mechanisms which underpin microbial interactions remain elusive. Using a pre-clinical model that mimics the cystic fibrosis lung, we discovered that the bacteriumPseudomonas aeruginosadetects and defends against a disulfide-containing toxin produced by the fungusAspergillus fumigatus. In an example of both convergent evolution of toxin defense and environmental cue sensing across kingdoms, we discovered that these organisms use the same cue to produce/sense this toxin, and the same enzymatic mechanism to protect against toxicity. This discovery of convergent evolution provides strong evidence forP. aeruginosaexposure to microbially-produced disulfide-containing toxins in natural environments.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory