DNA-uptake pili of Vibrio cholerae are required for chitin colonization and capable of kin recognition via sequence-specific self-interaction
How bacteria colonize surfaces and how they distinguish the individuals around them are fundamental biological questions. Type IV pili are a widespread and multipurpose class of cell surface polymers. Here we directly visualize the DNA-uptake pilus of Vibrio cholerae , which is produced specifically...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature microbiology 2019-09, Vol.4 (9), p.1545-1557 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | How bacteria colonize surfaces and how they distinguish the individuals around them are fundamental biological questions. Type IV pili are a widespread and multipurpose class of cell surface polymers. Here we directly visualize the DNA-uptake pilus of
Vibrio cholerae
, which is produced specifically during growth on its natural habitat—chitinous surfaces. As predicted, these pili are highly dynamic and retract before DNA uptake during competence for natural transformation. Interestingly, DNA-uptake pili can also self-interact to mediate auto-aggregation. This capability is conserved in disease-causing pandemic strains, which typically encode the same major pilin subunit, PilA. Unexpectedly, however, we discovered that extensive strain-to-strain variability in PilA (present in environmental isolates) creates a set of highly specific interactions, enabling cells producing pili composed of different PilA subunits to distinguish between one another. We go on to show that DNA-uptake pili bind to chitinous surfaces and are required for chitin colonization under flow, and that pili capable of self-interaction connect cells on chitin within dense pili networks. Our results suggest a model whereby DNA-uptake pili function to promote inter-bacterial interactions during surface colonization. Moreover, they provide evidence that type IV pili could offer a simple and potentially widespread mechanism for bacterial kin recognition.
V. cholerae
uses its DNA-uptake pili to bind to chitinous surfaces. These filaments also mediate auto-aggregation and, given strain-to-strain variability in PilA (the major pilin subunit), enable discrimination between cells carrying different PilA subunits. |
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ISSN: | 2058-5276 2058-5276 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41564-019-0479-5 |