13 resultados para Pyoverdine


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Bacterial-fungal interactions have important physiologic and medical ramifications, but the mechanisms of these interactions are poorly understood. The gut is host to trillions of microorganisms, and bacterial-fungal interactions are likely to be important. Using a neutropenic mouse model of microbial gastrointestinal colonization and dissemination, we show that the fungus Candida albicans inhibits the virulence of the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa by inhibiting P. aeruginosa pyochelin and pyoverdine gene expression, which plays a critical role in iron acquisition and virulence. Accordingly, deletion of both P. aeruginosa pyochelin and pyoverdine genes attenuates P. aeruginosa virulence. Heat-killed C. albicans has no effect on P. aeruginosa, whereas C. albicans secreted proteins directly suppress P. aeruginosa pyoverdine and pyochelin expression and inhibit P. aeruginosa virulence in mice. Interestingly, suppression or deletion of pyochelin and pyoverdine genes has no effect on P. aeruginosa's ability to colonize the GI tract but does decrease P. aeruginosa's cytotoxic effect on cultured colonocytes. Finally, oral iron supplementation restores P. aeruginosa virulence in P. aeruginosa and C. albicans colonized mice. Together, our findings provide insight into how a bacterial-fungal interaction can modulate bacterial virulence in the intestine. Previously described bacterial-fungal antagonistic interactions have focused on growth inhibition or colonization inhibition/modulation, yet here we describe a novel observation of fungal-inhibition of bacterial effectors critical for virulence but not important for colonization. These findings validate the use of a mammalian model system to explore the complexities of polymicrobial, polykingdom infections in order to identify new therapeutic targets for preventing microbial disease.

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The soil bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf-5 produces two siderophores, a pyoverdine and enantio-pyochelin, and its proteome includes 45 TonB-dependent outer-membrane proteins, which commonly function in uptake of siderophores and other substrates from the environment. The 45 proteins share the conserved beta-barrel and plug domains of TonB-dependent proteins but only 18 of them have an N-terminal signaling domain characteristic of TonB-dependent transducers (TBDTs), which participate in cell-surface signaling systems. Phylogenetic analyses of the 18 TBDTs and 27 TonB-dependent receptors (TBDRs), which lack the N-terminal signaling domain, suggest a complex evolutionary history including horizontal transfer among different microbial lineages. Putative functions were assigned to certain TBDRs and TBDTs in clades including well-characterized orthologs from other Pseudomonas spp. A mutant of Pf-5 with deletions in pyoverdine and enantio-pyochelin biosynthesis genes was constructed and characterized for iron-limited growth and utilization of a spectrum of siderophores. The mutant could utilize as iron sources a large number of pyoverdines with diverse structures as well as ferric citrate, heme, and the siderophores ferrichrome, ferrioxamine B, enterobactin, and aerobactin. The diversity and complexity of the TBDTs and TBDRs with roles in iron uptake clearly indicate the importance of iron in the fitness and survival of Pf-5 in the environment.

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Bacteria often possess multiple siderophore-based iron uptake systems for scavenging this vital resource from their environment. However, some siderophores seem redundant, because they have limited iron-binding efficiency and are seldom expressed under iron limitation. Here, we investigate the conundrum of why selection does not eliminate this apparent redundancy. We focus on Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a bacterium that can produce two siderophores-the highly efficient but metabolically expensive pyoverdine, and the inefficient but metabolically cheap pyochelin. We found that the bacteria possess molecular mechanisms to phenotypically switch from mainly producing pyoverdine under severe iron limitation to mainly producing pyochelin when iron is only moderately limited. We further show that strains exclusively producing pyochelin grew significantly better than strains exclusively producing pyoverdine under moderate iron limitation, whereas the inverse was seen under severe iron limitation. This suggests that pyochelin is not redundant, but that switching between siderophore strategies might be beneficial to trade off efficiencies versus costs of siderophores. Indeed, simulations parameterized from our data confirmed that strains retaining the capacity to switch between siderophores significantly outcompeted strains defective for one or the other siderophore under fluctuating iron availabilities. Finally, we discuss how siderophore switching can be viewed as a form of collective decision-making, whereby a coordinated shift in behaviour at the group level emerges as a result of positive and negative feedback loops operating among individuals at the local scale.

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Pyochelin (PCH) is a siderophore produced and secreted by Pseudomonas aeruginosa for iron capture. Using (55) Fe uptake and binding assays, we showed that PCH-Fe uptake in P. aeruginosa involves, in addition to the highly studied outer membrane transporter FptA, the inner membrane permease FptX, which recognizes PCH-(55) Fe with an affinity of 0.6 ± 0.2 nM and transports the ferri-siderophore complex from the periplasm into the cytoplasm: fptX deletion inhibited (55) Fe accumulation in the bacterial cytoplasm. Chromosomal replacement was used to generate P. aeruginosa strains producing fluorescent fusions with FptX, PchR (an AraC regulator), PchA (the first enzyme involved in the PCH biosynthesis) and PchE (a non-ribosomic peptide-synthetase involved in a further step). Fluorescence imaging and cellular fractionation showed a uniform repartition of FptX in the inner membrane. PchA and PchE were found in the cytoplasm, associated to the inner membrane all over the bacteria and also concentrated at the bacterial poles. PchE clustering at the bacterial poles was dependent on PchA expression, but on the opposite PchA clustering and membrane association was PchE-independent. PchA and PchE cellular organization suggests the existence of a siderosome for PCH biosynthesis as previously proposed for pyoverdine biosynthesis (another siderophore produced by P. aeruginosa).

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SUMMARY: Iron is an essential element for nearly all organisms but it is poorly available in most environments and not sufficient to support microbial growth. Bacteria have evolved a range of strategies to acquire this important metal, the most common of these being siderophore-mediated iron uptake. Siderophores are high-affinity iron chelators which are released to the extracellular environment where they complex iron and deliver it to the bacterial cell, via specific uptake systems. The Gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa produces two siderophores, pyoverdine and pyochelin, which both contribute to the virulence of this opportunistic human pathogen. The genes responsible for pyochelin-mediated iron uptake are grouped in the P. aeruginosa chromosome. The pyochelin biosynthetic genes are organized in two divergent operons, pchDCBA and pchEFGHI, which flank the regulatory gene pchR. The fptA gene, encoding the ferric pyochelin outer membrane receptor, occurs immediately downstream of the pchEFGHI genes. The biosynthesis of the siderophore and its receptor is subjected to dual regulation enabling P. aeruginosa to respond not only to the intracellular iron level but also to the presence of the siderophore in the extracellular environment. Negative regulation is mediated by the widespread Fur protein which employs ferrous iron as a corepressor and binds to a consensus sequence in the promoter region of iron-regulated genes. Positive regulation occurs during iron starvation and requires the AraC-type transcriptional regulator PchR. This regulator, together with pyochelin, induces the expression of pyochelin biosynthesis and uptake genes via a mechanism which was partly unraveled during this thesis. A 32-bp conserved sequence element (PchR-box) was identified in promoter regions of pyochelin-controlled genes. The PchR-box in the pchR-pchDCBA intergenic region was found to be essential for the induction of the pchDCBA operon and for the repression of the divergently transcribed pchR gene. PchR was purified as a fusion with maltose-binding protein (MBP). Mobility shift assays demonstrated specific binding of MBP-PchR to the PchR-box in the presence, but not in the absence of pyochelin. PchR-box mutations which interfered with pyochelin-dependent regulation in vivo, also affected pyochelin-dependent PchR-box recognition in vitro. These results show that pyochelin is the intracellular effector required for PchR-mediated regulation. The fact that extracellular pyochelin triggers this regulation implies that the siderophore can enter the cytoplasm. This conclusion was corroborated by analysing the importance of known and putative pyochelin uptake genes for pyochelin-dependent gene regulation. The pyochelin receptor gene fptA is followed by three genes, fptB, fptC, and fptX, which were shown here to be co-transcribed with fPtA. While fPtX encodes an inner membrane pen-I-lease, the functions of FptB and FptC are currently unknown. FptA and FptX, which are both required for pyochelin-mediated iron uptake, were found to be also needed for pyochelin-dependent gene regulation. FptB and FptC however, were not required and their role, if any, in the uptake of the PchR effector pyochelin remains elusive. RESUME Le fer est un élément essentiel pour la quasi-totalité des organismes, mais dans la plupart des environnements, il est difficilement accessible et insuffisant à la croissance microbienne. Les bactéries ont développé de multiples stratégies pour acquérir ce précieux métal, la plus commune étant l'acquisition au moyen de sidérophores. Les sidérophores sont des petites molécules dotées d'une forte affinité pour le fer qui, une fois relâchées dans l'environnement extracellulaire, vont complexer le fer et le délivrer à la cellule bactérienne par l'intermédiaire de systèmes d'acquisition spécifiques. La bactérie Gram-négative Pseudomonas aeruginosa produit deux sidérophores, la pyoverdine et la pyochéline, qui contribuent également à la virulence de ce pathogène opportuniste. Les gènes impliqués dans l'acquisition du fer à l'aide de la pyochéline sont regroupés sur t. le chromosome de P. aeruginosa. Les gènes de biosynthèse de la pyochéline sont organisés en deux opérons divergents, pchDCBA et pchEFGHI, qui flanquent le gène régulateur pchR. Le gène fptA, codant pour le récepteur de la pyochéline dans la membrane externe, est situé immédiatement en aval des gènes pchEFGHL La biosynthèse du sidérophore et de son récepteur est soumise à une double régulation permettant à P. aeruginosa de réagir non seulement à la quantité de fer intracellulaire, mais également à la présence du sidérophore dans le milieu extracellulaire. La répression se fait par l'intermédiaire de la protéine Fur, qui nécessite le fer ferreux comme co-répresseur et se lie à une séquence consensus dans la région promotrice des gènes régulés par le fer. L'induction se produit lorsque le fer est limitant, et requiert PchR, un régulateur transcriptionnel de la famille AraC. En présence de pyochéline, ce régulateur induit l'expression des gènes de biosynthèse et du récepteur de la pyochéline par l'intermédiaire d'un mécanisme partiellement résolu dans ce travail. Une séquence conservée (PchR-box) a été identifiée dans la région promotrice des gènes régulés par la pyochéline. La PchR-box située dans la région intergénique pchR-pchDCBA s'est révélée être importante pour l'induction de l'opéron pchDCBA et la répression du gène divergent pchR. PchR a été purifiée en tant que protéine de fusion avec une protéine liant le maltose (MBP). Des expériences de gel retard ont démontré la liaison spécifique de la protéine MBP-PchR sur la PchR-box en présence, mais non en absence de pyochéline. Les mutations de la PchR-box qui ont affecté la régulation pyochéline-dépendante in vivo, ont également eu un effet sur la liaison de la protéine in vitro. Ces résultats démontrent que la pyochéline est l'effecteur intracellulaire nécessaire à la régulation par PchR. Le fait que la pyochéline extracellulaire soit capable d'activer cette régulation implique que le sidérophore entre dans le cytoplasme. Cette conclusion a été corroborée par l'évaluation du rôle des gènes connus ou putatifs de l'incorporation du fer via la pyochéline sur la régulation pyochéline-dépendente. Le gène fPtA, codant pour le récepteur de la pyochéline, est suivi de trois gènes, fptB,fptC, et fptX, co-transcrits avec,ffitA. Si sffitX code pour une perméase de la membrane interne, la fonction de FptB et FptC reste obscure. FptA et FptX, nécessaires à l'acquisition du fer par l'intermédiaire de la pyochéline, se sont également révélés être requis pour la régulation pyochéline-dépendante des gènes pchDCBA, pchEFGHI et fptABCX. FptB et FptC n'ont quant à eux vraisemblablement pas de rôle majeur à jouer, si ce n'est aucun, dans l'incorporation de la pyochéline.

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Pyocins are toxic proteins produced by some strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa that are lethal for related strains of the same species. Some soluble pyocins (S2, S3 and S4) were previously shown to use the pyoverdine siderophore receptors to enter the cell. The P. aeruginosa PAO1 pore-forming pyocin S5 encoding gene (PAO985) was cloned into the expression vector pET15b, and the affinity-purified protein product tested for its killing activity against different P. aeruginosa strains. The results, however, did not show any correlation with a specific ferripyoverdine receptor. To further identify the S5 receptor, transposon mutants were generated. Pooled mutants were exposed to pyocin S5 and the resistant colonies growing in the killing zone were selected. The majority of S5-resistant mutants had an insertion in the fptA gene encoding the receptor for the siderophore pyochelin. Complementation of an fptA transposon mutant with the P. aeruginosa fptA gene in trans restored the sensitivity to S5. In order to define the receptor-binding domain of pyocin S5, two hybrid pyocins were constructed containing different regions from pyocin S5 fused to the C-terminal translocation and DNase killing domains of pyocin S2. Only the protein containing amino acid residues 151 to 300 from S5 showed toxicity, indicating that the pyocin S5 receptor-binding domain is not at the N-terminus of the protein as in other S-type pyocins. Pyocin S5 was, however, unable to kill Burkholderia cenocepacia strains producing a ferripyochelin FptA receptor, nor was the B. cenocepacia fptA gene able to restore the sensitivity of the resistant fptA mutant P. aeruginosa strain.

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Pseudomonas fluorescens strain CHA0 suppresses various plant diseases caused by soil-borne fungi. The pseudomonad produces the antimicrobial metabolites 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol (Phl), pyoluteorin (Plt) and hydrogen cyanide, which are important for disease suppression, as well as the siderophores pyoverdine (Pvd), salicylic acid (Sal) and pyochelin (Pch). In the current work, a derivative of CHA0 with a mutation in the global regulator gene gacA (GacA−), which is unable to produce Phl, Plt and HCN, failed to protect the dicotyledonous plants cress and cucumber against damping-off caused by Pythium ultimum. In contrast, the GacA− mutant could still protect the Gramineae wheat and maize against damping-off mediated by the same strain of P. ultimum, and wheat against take-all caused by Gaeumannomyces graminis. However, the GacA− mutant overproduced Pch and Pvd. To gain more insight into disease protection afforded by the GacA− mutant, a GacA− Pvd− double mutant (strain CHA496) was constructed by gene replacement. Strain CHA496 overproduced Pch and Sal compared with CHA0 and protected wheat against P. ultimum and G. graminis, whereas cress and cucumber were not protected. Addition of FeCl3 repressed Pch and Sal production by strain CHA496 in vitro and impaired the protection of wheat in soil microcosms. In conclusion, a functional gacA gene was necessary for the protection of dicotyledons against root diseases, but not for that of Gramineae. Results indicated also that Pch and/or Sal were involved in the ability of the GacA− Pvd− mutant of CHA0 to suppress root diseases in Gramineae.

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Summary Copper is an important trace element and micronutrient for living organisms as it is the cofactor of several enzymes involved in diverse biological redox processes such as aerobic respiration, denitrification and photosynthesis. Despite its importance, copper may be poorly bioavailable in soils and aquatic environments, as well as in the human body, especially at physiological or alkaline pH. In this work, we have investigated the strategies that the versatile bacterium and opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa has evolved to face and overcome copper limitation. The global response of the P. aeruginosa to copper limitation was assessed under aerobic conditions. Numerous iron uptake functions (including the siderophores pyoverdine and pyochelin) were down-regulated whereas expression of cioAB (encoding an alternative, copper-independent, cyanide-resistant ubiquinol oxidase) was up-regulated. Wild type P. aeruginosa was able to grow aerobically in a defined glucose medium depleted of copper by a copper chelator, whereas a cioAB mutant did not grow. Thus, P. aeruginosa relies on the CioAB enzyme to cope with severe copper deprivation. A quadruple cyo cco1 cco2 cox mutant, which was deleted for all known heme-copper terminal oxidases of P. aeruginosa, grew aerobically, albeit more slowly than did the wild type, indicating that the CioAB enzyme is capable of energy conservation. However, the expression of a cioA'-'lacZ fusion was less dependent on the copper status in the quadruple mutant than in the wild type, suggesting that copper availability might affect cioAB expression indirectly, via the function of the heme-copper oxidases. These results suggest that the CioAB enzyme can be used as a by-pass strategy to overcome severe copper limitation and perform aerobic respiration even if virtually no copper is available. The PA0114 gene, which encodes a protein of the SCOT/SenC family, was found to be important for copper acquisition and aerobic respiration in low copper conditions. A PA0114 (sent) mutant grew poorly in low copper media and had low terminal oxidase activity with TMPD (N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine), but expressed the CioAB enzyme at elevated levels. Addition of copper reversed these phenotypes, suggesting that periplasmic copper capture by the SenC protein is another strategy that helps P. aeruginosa to adapt to copper deprivation. RESUME Le cuivre est un micronutriment important pour les organismes vivants. Il représente le cofacteur de plusieurs enzymes impliquées dans une multitude de processus biologiques tels que la respiration aérobie, la dénitrification et la photosynthèse. Malgré son importance, le cuivre peut être peu disponible dans les sols, les environnements aquatiques et le corps humain, spécialement à pH physiologique ou alcalin. Dans ce travail nous avons étudié les stratégies développées par la bactérie pathogène opportuniste Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 afm de faire face et de surmonter le manque de cuivre. La réponse globale de P. aeruginosa à la carence de cuivre a été analysée dans des conditions aérobie. Les résultats obtenus ont montré que plusieurs gènes impliqués dans l'acquisition du fer, tels que les gènes codant pour les sidérophores (pyoverdine et pyochéline), étaient réprimés, tandis que l'expression de l'opéron cioAB, codant pour l'oxydase terminale insensible au cyanure (CIO), était augmentée. La souche sauvage P. aeruginosa est capable de croître dans un milieu où la concentration en cuivre est limitée, due à la présence d'un chélateur spéciftque de cuivre, tandis que le mutant cioAB ne croît pas dans ces conditions. Nous avons conclu que P. aeruginosa nécessite l'oxydase terminale CIO pour faire face à la carence en cuivre. Un quadruple mutant affecté dans toutes les oxydases dépendantes du cuivre (cyo ccol cco2 cox) et appartenant aux oxydases de type hème-cuivre, peut croître en aérobie, néanmoins plus lentement que la souche sauvage, ce qui montre que l'enzyme CIO est capable de conserver l'énergie. L'expression de la fusion rapportrice cioA'-'IacZ chez le quadruple mutant est moins dépendante de la disponibilité de cuivre que chez la souche sauvage. Ces résultats suggèrent que la disponibilité de cuivre influence l'expression de cioAB d'une façon indirecte, par le biais des oxydases terminales de type héme-cuivre. Il est donc possible qu'en cas de carence de cuivre, P. aeruginosa utilise l'enzyme CIO comme stratégie afin de surmonter ce manque et de réaliser la respiration aérobie. Nous avons démontré que le gène PA0114, codant pour une protéine appartenant à la famille SCO1/SenC, est important dans l'acquisition et dans la respiration aérobie dans des environnements où le cuivre est présent en faible concentration. En ces conditions, la croissance du mutant senC est faible; de plus, l'activité des oxydases terminales en présence du donneur d'électrons TMPD (N,N,N,N'-tetraméthyl-p-phénylenediamine) est basse. Toutefois, l'addition de cuivre au milieu de culture permet de restaurer le phénotype du type sauvage. Ces résultats montrent que la protéine SenC est capable d'acquérir le cuivre et représente donc une autre stratégie chez P. aeruginosa pour s'adapter à un manque de cuivre.

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Public goods cooperation is common in microbes, and there is much interest in understanding how such traits evolve. Research in recent years has identified several important factors that shape the evolutionary dynamics of such systems, yet few studies have investigated scenarios involving interactions between multiple public goods. Here, we offer general predictions about the evolutionary trajectories of two public goods traits having positive, negative or neutral regulatory influence on one another's expression, and we report on a test of some of our predictions in the context of Pseudomonas aeruginosa's production of two interlinked iron-scavenging siderophores. First, we confirmed that both pyoverdine and pyochelin siderophores do operate as public goods under appropriate environmental conditions. We then tracked their production in lines experimentally evolved under different iron-limitation regimes known to favour different siderophore expression profiles. Under strong iron limitation, where pyoverdine represses pyochelin, we saw a decline in pyoverdine and a concomitant increase in pyochelin - consistent with expansion of pyoverdine-defective cheats derepressed for pyochelin. Under moderate iron limitation, pyochelin declined - again consistent with an expected cheat invasion scenario - but there was no concomitant shift in pyoverdine because cross-suppression between the traits is unidirectional only. Alternating exposure to strong and moderate iron limitation caused qualitatively similar though lesser shifts compared to the constant-environment regimes. Our results confirm that the regulatory interconnections between public goods traits can significantly modulate the course of evolution, yet also suggest how we can start to predict the impacts such complexities will have on phenotypic divergence and community stability.

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Restricted bioavailability of copper in certain environments can interfere with cellular respiration because copper is an essential cofactor of most terminal oxidases. The global response of the metabolically versatile bacterium and opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa to copper limitation was assessed under aerobic conditions. Expression of cioAB (encoding an alternative, copper-independent, cyanide-resistant ubiquinol oxidase) was upregulated, whereas numerous iron uptake functions (including the siderophores pyoverdine and pyochelin) were expressed at reduced levels, presumably reflecting a lower demand for iron by respiratory enzymes. Wild-type P. aeruginosa was able to grow aerobically in a defined glucose medium depleted of copper, whereas a cioAB mutant did not grow. Thus, P. aeruginosa relies on the CioAB enzyme to cope with severe copper deprivation. A quadruple cyo cco1 cco2 cox mutant, which was deleted for all known heme-copper terminal oxidases of P. aeruginosa, grew aerobically, albeit more slowly than did the wild type, indicating that the CioAB enzyme is capable of energy conservation. However, the expression of a cioA'-'lacZ fusion was less dependent on the copper status in the quadruple mutant than in the wild type, suggesting that copper availability might affect cioAB expression indirectly, via the function of the heme-copper oxidases.

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The production of beneficial public goods is common in the microbial world, and so is cheating - the exploitation of public goods by nonproducing mutants. Here, we examine co-evolutionary dynamics between cooperators and cheats and ask whether cooperators can evolve strategies to reduce the burden of exploitation, and whether cheats in turn can improve their exploitation abilities. We evolved cooperators of the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa, producing the shareable iron-scavenging siderophore pyoverdine, together with cheats, defective in pyoverdine production but proficient in uptake. We found that cooperators managed to co-exist with cheats in 56% of all replicates over approximately 150 generations of experimental evolution. Growth and competition assays revealed that co-existence was fostered by a combination of general adaptions to the media and specific adaptions to the co-evolving opponent. Phenotypic screening and whole-genome resequencing of evolved clones confirmed this pattern, and suggest that cooperators became less exploitable by cheats because they significantly reduced their pyoverdine investment. Cheats, meanwhile, improved exploitation efficiency through mutations blocking the costly pyoverdine-signalling pathway. Moreover, cooperators and cheats evolved reduced motility, a pattern that likely represents adaptation to laboratory conditions, but at the same time also affects social interactions by reducing strain mixing and pyoverdine sharing. Overall, we observed parallel evolution, where co-existence of cooperators and cheats was enabled by a combination of adaptations to the abiotic and social environment and their interactions.

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Under conditions of iron limitation Pseudomonas fluorescens ATCC 17400 produces two siderophores, pyoverdine, and a second siderophore quinolobactin, which itself results from the hydrolysis of the unstable molecule 8-hydroxy-4-methoxy-2-quinoline thiocarboxylic acid (thioquinolobactin). Pseudomonas fluorescens ATCC 17400 also displays a strong in vitro antagonism against the Oomycete Pythium, which is repressed by iron, suggesting the involvement of a siderophore(s). While a pyoverdine-negative mutant retains most of its antagonism, a thioquinolobactin-negative mutant only slowed-down Pythium growth, and a double pyoverdine-, thioquinolobactin-negative mutant, which does not produce any siderophore, totally lost its antagonism against Pythium. The siderophore thioquinolobactin could be purified and identified from spent medium and showed anti-Pythium activity, but it was quickly hydrolysed to quinolobactin, which we showed has no antimicrobial activity. Analysis of antagonism-affected transposon mutants revealed that genes involved in haem biosynthesis and sulfur assimilation are important for the production of thioquinolobactin and the expression of antagonism.

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Cell-to-cell communication is a major process that allows bacteria to sense and coordinately react to the fluctuating conditions of the surrounding environment. In several pathogens, this process triggers the production of virulence factors and/or a switch in bacterial lifestyle that is a major determining factor in the outcome and severity of the infection. Understanding how bacteria control these signaling systems is crucial to the development of novel antimicrobial agents capable of reducing virulence while allowing the immune system of the host to clear bacterial infection, an approach likely to reduce the selective pressures for development of resistance. We provide here an up-to-date overview of the molecular basis and physiological implications of cell-to-cell signaling systems in Gram-negative bacteria, focusing on the well-studied bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa. All of the known cell-to-cell signaling systems in this bacterium are described, from the most-studied systems, i.e., N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHLs), the 4-quinolones, the global activator of antibiotic and cyanide synthesis (GAC), the cyclic di-GMP (c-di-GMP) and cyclic AMP (cAMP) systems, and the alarmones guanosine tetraphosphate (ppGpp) and guanosine pentaphosphate (pppGpp), to less-well-studied signaling molecules, including diketopiperazines, fatty acids (diffusible signal factor [DSF]-like factors), pyoverdine, and pyocyanin. This overview clearly illustrates that bacterial communication is far more complex than initially thought and delivers a clear distinction between signals that are quorum sensing dependent and those relying on alternative factors for their production.