A Chemical Counterpunch: Chromobacterium violaceum ATCC 31532 Produces Violacein in Response to Translation-Inhibiting Antibiotics

Antibiotics produced by bacteria play important roles in microbial interactions and competition Antibiosis can induce resistance mechanisms in target organisms, and at sublethal doses, antibiotics have been shown to globally alter gene expression patterns. Here, we show that hygromycin A from sp. st...

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Veröffentlicht in:mBio 2020-05, Vol.11 (3)
Hauptverfasser: Lozano, Gabriel L, Guan, Changhui, Cao, Yanzhuan, Borlee, Bradley R, Broderick, Nichole A, Stabb, Eric V, Handelsman, Jo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Antibiotics produced by bacteria play important roles in microbial interactions and competition Antibiosis can induce resistance mechanisms in target organisms, and at sublethal doses, antibiotics have been shown to globally alter gene expression patterns. Here, we show that hygromycin A from sp. strain 2AW. induces ATCC 31532 to produce the purple antibiotic violacein. Sublethal doses of other antibiotics that similarly target the polypeptide elongation step of translation likewise induced violacein production, unlike antibiotics with different targets. biofilm formation and virulence against were also induced by translation-inhibiting antibiotics, and we identified an ntibiotic- nduced esponse ( ) two-component regulatory system that is required for these responses. Genetic analyses indicated a connection between the Air system, quorum-dependent signaling, and the negative regulator VioS, leading us to propose a model for induction of violacein production. This work suggests a novel mechanism of interspecies interaction in which a bacterium produces an antibiotic in response to inhibition by another bacterium and supports the role of antibiotics as signal molecules. Secondary metabolites play important roles in microbial communities, but their natural functions are often unknown and may be more complex than appreciated. While compounds with antibiotic activity are often assumed to underlie microbial competition, they may alternatively act as signal molecules. In either scenario, microorganisms might evolve responses to sublethal concentrations of these metabolites, either to protect themselves from inhibition or to change certain behaviors in response to the local abundance of another species. Here, we report that violacein production by ATCC 31532 is induced in response to hygromycin A from sp. 2AW, and we show that this response is dependent on inhibition of translational polypeptide elongation and a previously uncharacterized two-component regulatory system. The breadth of the transcriptional response beyond violacein induction suggests a surprisingly complex metabolite-mediated microbe-microbe interaction and supports the hypothesis that antibiotics evolved as signal molecules. These novel insights will inform predictive models of soil community dynamics and the unintended effects of clinical antibiotic administration.
ISSN:2161-2129
2150-7511
DOI:10.1128/mBio.00948-20