4.8 Article

Quorum-sensing control of antibiotic resistance stabilizes cooperation in Chromobacterium violaceum

期刊

ISME JOURNAL
卷 12, 期 5, 页码 1263-1272

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41396-018-0047-7

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资金

  1. University of Kansas
  2. NIH COBRE Center for Molecular Analysis of Disease Pathways Research Project Award [P20GM103638]
  3. NIH Chemical Biology Training program [T32 GM08545]
  4. NIH Post-Baccalaureate Research Education program [R25GM078441]
  5. KU Undergraduate Research Award
  6. NIH KU Legacy Chemical Methodologies and Library Development program [R24GM111385]
  7. COBRE CMADP Chemical Biology Core [P20GM103638, P20GM113117]
  8. NIH K-INBRE program [P20GM103418]
  9. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES [P20GM103418, R24GM111385, P20GM103638, R25GM078441, P20GM113117, T32GM008545] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Many Proteobacteria use quorum sensing to regulate production of public goods, such as antimicrobials and proteases, that are shared among members of a community. Public goods are vulnerable to exploitation by cheaters, such as quorum sensing-defective mutants. Quorum sensing-regulated private goods, goods that benefit only producing cells, can prevent the emergence of cheaters under certain growth conditions. Previously, we developed a laboratory co-culture model to investigate the importance of quorum-regulated antimicrobials during interspecies competition. In our model, Burkholderia thailandensis and Chromobacterium violaceum each use quorum sensing-controlled antimicrobials to inhibit the other species' growth. Here, we show that C. violaceum uses quorum sensing to increase resistance to bactobolin, a B. thailandensis antibiotic, by increasing transcription of a putative antibiotic efflux pump. We demonstrate conditions where C. violaceum quorum-defective cheaters emerge and show that in these conditions, bactobolin restrains cheaters. We also demonstrate that bactobolin restrains quorum-defective mutants in our co-culture model, and the increase in antimicrobial-producing cooperators drives the C. violaceum population to become more competitive. Our results describe a mechanism of cheater restraint involving quorum control of efflux pumps and demonstrate that interspecies competition can reinforce cooperative behaviors by placing constraints on quorum sensing-defective mutants.

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