Aryl-homoserine lactone quorum sensing in stem-nodulating photosynthetic bradyrhizobia

Many Proteobacteha possess Luxl-LuxR-type quorum-sensing systems that produce and detect fatty acyl-homoserine lactone (HSL) signals. The photoheterotroph Rhodopseudomonas palustris is unusual in that it produces and detects an aryl-HSL, p-coumaroyl-HSL, and signal production requires an exogenous s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2011-04, Vol.108 (17), p.7183-7188
Hauptverfasser: Ahlgren, Nathan A., Harwood, Caroline S., Schaefer, Amy L., Giraud, Eric, Greenberg, E. Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Many Proteobacteha possess Luxl-LuxR-type quorum-sensing systems that produce and detect fatty acyl-homoserine lactone (HSL) signals. The photoheterotroph Rhodopseudomonas palustris is unusual in that it produces and detects an aryl-HSL, p-coumaroyl-HSL, and signal production requires an exogenous source of pcoumarate. A photosynthetic stem-nodulating member of the genus Bradyrhizobium produces a small molecule signal that elicits an R. palustris quorum-sensing response. Here, we show that this signal is cinnamoyl-HSL and that cinnamoyl-HSL is produced by the Luxl homolog Bral and detected by BraR. Cinnamoyl-HSL reaches concentrations on the order of 50 nM in cultures of stemnodulating bradyrhizobia grown in the presence or absence of cinnamate. Acyl-HSLs often reach concentrations of 0.1-30 μM in bacterial cultures, and generally, LuxR-type receptors respond to signals in a concentration range from 5 to a few hundred nanomolar. Our stem-nodulating Bradyrhizobium strain responds to picomolar concentrations of cinnamoyl-HSL and thus, produces cinnamoyl-HSL in excess of the levels required for a signal response without an exogenous source of cinnamate. The ability of Bradyrhizobium to produce and respond to cinnamoyl-HSL shows that aryl-HSL production is not unique to R. palustris, that the aromatic acid substrate for aryl-HSL synthesis does not have to be supplied exogenously, and that some acyl-HSL quorum-sensing systems may function at very low signal production and response levels.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1103821108