L5 - Social communication & polymicrobial interactions Flashcards
What is quorum sensing?
- A form of cell-to-cell communication
- Characterized by the secretion & detection of autoinducers
- Detection of autoinducer results in coordinated behaviours within the population
QS requires the secretion and detection of what?
Autoinducers
What is the concentration of autoinducer is proportional to?
Population density
Autoinducer molecules – the AHLs are widespread in what bacterium?
N-acylhomoserine lactone (AHL) QS is widespread in
Gram-ve bacteria
Name the autoinducer molecules
- AHL (N-acylhomoserine lactone)
- AI-2 (Autoinducer-2)
- AIP (Autoinducing peptide)
- DSF (Diffusible signal factor)
- PQS (Pseudomonas quinolone signal)
Methods of secretion & detection vary depending on the autoinducer
Define the autoinducer molecules
Autoinducer-2 is shared by both Gram-positives & Gram-negatives and is synthesized by the protein LuxS.
AIP-mediated QS activity is a feature of Gram-positives. AIPs differ in their length and amino acid sequence. This peptide is initially produced as a propeptide, which is then processed within the bacterial cell and actively secreted from the cell (rather than passive diffusion). AIPs do not re-enter the cell. Instead, they act on a histidine kinase on the cell surface, that then in turn activates a cytoplasmic response regulator, bringing about a change in gene expression.
DSF-like molecules are commonly found in Gram-negative species. They are also reported to occur in Streptococcus mutans (Gram-positive)
PQS is specific to Pseudomonas aeruginosa, although several species produce related alkyl-quinolone (AQ) molecules.
Acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) QS mediated by what?
How does this occur?
Mediated by LuxI & LuxR family proteins
LuxI proteins are AHL synthases; LuxR proteins are transcriptional regulators.
- AHL is produced within the cell and diffuses out. Diffusion gradient favours movement of the AHL from the cytoplasm to the extracellular environment. At high cell density, AHL accumulates in the extracellular environment and the diffusion gradient is reversed. Consequently, the diffusion of AHLs back into cell is favoured. After re-entering the cell, it binds with transcriptional regulator LuxR that then binds to DNA and alters gene expression accordingly.
- When extracellular AHL accumulates, AHL diffuses back into the cell, within the cell AHL binds to transcriptional regulator LuxR, altering its activity and subsequent gene expression
PQS QS (P. aeruginosa) mediated by what?
PQS signal molecule is hydrophobic, and is trafficked between cells in outer membrane vesicles.
Due to the very hydrophobic nature of PQS, it is very unlikely to freely diffuse in aqueous environments. Consequently, for trafficking between cells, it appears to be packaged within membrane vesicles. Indeed, by interacting with structural components of the lipid A, PQS promotes its own packaging into vesicles by influencing membrane fluidity and curvature, and promoting vesicle blebbing.
AIP QS (Staphylococcus aureus) mediated by what?
- ‘Auto-inducing peptides’ (AIP); derived from the locus agrBDCA
- “Propeptide” is processed and actively secreted by AgrB
- AgrC & AgrA constitute a two-component system that mediates AIP sensing and response.
In the case of Gram-positives like Staphylococcus aureus, the signal is an “auto-inducing peptide” rather than an AHL. This peptide is initially produced as a propeptide, which is then processed within the bacterial cell and actively secreted from the cell (rather than passive diffusion of AHLs). Again, once the concentration of AIP reaches a certain level, it exerts an effect on the bacterial cells. However, AIPs do not re-enter the cell. Instead, they act on a receptor on the cell surface, that then in turn activates a cytoplasmic protein termed a response regulator that alters gene expression. This process is a two-component system, that occurs through histidine kinase activity of the receptor protein and subsequent phosphotransfer to the response regulator.
Why do bacteria perform quorum sensing?
Bacteria produce many secreted factors that are important for growth &/or survival, for example:
- Proteases break down proteins, providing carbon source for growth
- Haemolysins lyse blood cells, releasing source of iron for bacteria
- Individual bacterial cells cannot produce sufficient quantities to gain much benefit
However, populations of bacteria can produce sufficient quantities if they co-ordinate their behaviour through quorum sensing
How many QS systems of P. aeruginosa are there? and what are they?
At least four QS systems exist in P. aeruginosa
1) LasIR system
3-oxo-C12-HSL (AHL)
2) RhlIR system
C4-HSL (AHL)
3) Pseudomonas quinolone signal (PQS)
4) IQS
Within Pseudomonas aeruginosa, there are at least four distinct quorum sensing systems. Two of them are based on the AHL system (LasIR and RlhIR). In these AHL-based systems, LasI and RhlI are the AHL synthases (i.e. the LuxI family proteins), whilst LasR and RhlR are the corresponding transcriptional regulators (the LuxR family proteins).
In addition, there is the PQS system (Pseudomonas quinolone signal). The PQS system uses a structurally distinct signal molecule that is extremely hydrophobic in nature. This hydrophobicity means that for it to effectively diffuse within/through a bacterial population, it is actually packaged into membrane vesicles that bud off from the bacterial cell, and it is these PQS-containing vesicles that enable PQS-mediated cell-cell communication.
The IQS system is the most recently described, so called because it Integrates quorum sensing systems and stress response pathways.
Explain the hierarchy of the Pseudomonas AHL systems
LasIR system makes the 3-oxo-C12-HSL. Once the concentration of that HSL exceeds the threshold, it re-enters the cell and binds to LasR. The 3-oxo-C12-HSL-LasR complex binds promoter regions of multiple genes, activating or repressing their transcription. It autoregulates itself (i.e. promoting lasI expression to further promote synthesis of 3-oxo-C12-HSL). It also activates expression of the Rhl system. Both the LasIR and the RhlIR systems regulate sets of virulence genes – some unique to each system, others in common.
The Las system controls the production of multiple virulence factors involved in acute infection and host cell damage, including the LasA & LasB elastases, exotoxin A (toxA), and alkaline protease (AprA). The Rhl system controls expression of several genes, including those responsible for the production of rhamnolipids (rhlAB), and those implicated in secretion systems (XcpR & XcpP).
Define the interconnectedness of the four QS signalling networks in P. aeruginosa.
The LasIR system, which makes the 3-oxo-C12-HSL, is generally regarded as being at the top of the hierarchy. The Las system positively-regulates all of the other three systems, as well as regulating itself (i.e. positive feedback loop). The Rhl system also positively-regulates itself.
pqsABCD are involved in the synthesis of PQS. PqsR is a LysR transcriptional regulator that controls expression of the pqsABCD operon, and the expression of pqsR is itself controlled by the LasR system. PqsR is the receptor for PQS and also its co-inducer, as the activity of PqsR in inducing expression of pqsABCD is dramatically increased when PQS is bound. The PQS system enhances expression of the rhl genes, promoting activity of the RhlIR system. However, expression of the pqs operons is inhibited by the activity of the RhlIR system, suggesting that the ratio of concentrations of the 3-oxo-C12-HSL and the C4-HSL play a decisive role in determining the level of PQS activity.
IQS synthesis involves the ambBCDE gene cluster. The IQS system is also tightly controlled by the LasIR system – disruption of either lasI or lasR completely abrogates expression of genes responsible for IQS production.
Beyond those connections identified above, environmental factors can influence activity of QS systems (e.g. IQS is influenced by low phosphate levels), whilst there is evidence to suggest that individual QS systems can compensate for the loss of another (e.g. the Rhl system can compensate for a non-functional Las system by upregulating lasI and promoting production of 3-oxo-C12-HSL).
The QS regulon of P. aeruginosa
Elastase degrades elastin and other matrix proteins of the human lung, leading to tissue damage and destruction of lung structure. It is also a potent inflammatory factor.
Alkaline Protease can proteolytically inactivate cytokines and other host defence proteins.
Superoxide dismutase is an important anti-oxidant protein, protecting the cell from oxidative stress.
LasA is a metalloendopeptidase which has strong anti-staphylococcal activity, and can also degrade elastin
Hydrogen cyanide (HCN) is toxic to cells, inhibiting cellular respiration. Detection of HCN in CF sputum has been directly associated with poorer lung function.
Rhamnolipids are haemolytic glycolipids with detergent-like activity. They demonstrate cytoltic activity against monocyte-derived macrophages and also polymorphonuclear leukocytes (e.g. neutrophils)
Pyocyanin has very diverse functions.
What are the 4 biological activities of pyocyanin from the QS regulon of P. aeruginosa?
REDOX EFFECT
IMMUNOLOGICAL EFFECTS
COMPETITIVENESS
PHYSICAL EFFECTS