Carbon Starvation Induces the Expression of PprB-Regulated Genes in Pseudomonas aeruginosa

can cause severe infections in humans. This bacterium often adopts a biofilm lifestyle that is hard to treat. In several previous studies, the PprA-PprB two-component system (TCS), which controls the expression of type IVb pili, BapA adhesin, and CupE fimbriae, was shown to be involved in biofilm fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied and environmental microbiology 2019-11, Vol.85 (22)
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Congcong, Chen, Wenhui, Xia, Aiguo, Zhang, Rongrong, Huang, Yajia, Yang, Shuai, Ni, Lei, Jin, Fan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:can cause severe infections in humans. This bacterium often adopts a biofilm lifestyle that is hard to treat. In several previous studies, the PprA-PprB two-component system (TCS), which controls the expression of type IVb pili, BapA adhesin, and CupE fimbriae, was shown to be involved in biofilm formation (M. Romero, H. Silistre, L. Lovelock, V. J. Wright, K.-G. Chan, et al., Nucleic Acids Res 46:6823-6840, 2018, https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gky324; S. de Bentzmann, C. Giraud, C. S. Bernard, V. Calderon, F. Ewald F, et al., PLoS Pathog 8:e1003052, 2012, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003052). However, signals or environmental conditions that can trigger the PprA-PprB TCS are still unknown, and the molecular mechanisms of PprB-mediated biofilm formation are poorly characterized. Here, we report that carbon starvation stress (CSS) can induce the expression of and genes in the PprB regulon. CSS-induced transcription is mediated by the stress response sigma factor RpoS rather than the two-component sensor PprA. We also observed a strong negative regulation of PprB on the transcription of itself. Further experiments showed that PprB overexpression greatly enhanced cell-cell adhesion (CCA) and cell-surface adhesion (CSA) in Specifically, under the background of PprB overexpression, both the BapA adhesin and CupE fimbriae displayed positive effects on CCA and CSA, while the type IVb pili showed an unexpected negative effect on CCA and no effect on CSA. In addition, expression of the PprB regulon genes were significantly increased in 3-day colony biofilms, indicating a possible carbon limitation state. The CSS-RpoS-PprB-Bap/Flp/CupE pathway identified in this study provides a new perspective on the process of biofilm formation in carbon-limited environments. Typically, the determination of the external signals that can trigger a regulatory system is crucial to understand the regulatory logic and inward function of that system. The PprA-PprB two-component system was reported to be involved in biofilm formation in , but the signals triggering this system are unknown. In this study, we found that carbon starvation stress (CSS) induces transcription of and genes in the PprB regulon through an RpoS-dependent pathway. Increased PprB expression leads to enhanced cell-cell adhesion (CCA) and cell-surface adhesion (CSA) in Both CCA and CSA are largely dependent on the Bap secretion system and are moderately dependent on the CupE fimbriae. Our findings suggest that P
ISSN:0099-2240
1098-5336
DOI:10.1128/AEM.01705-19