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Indole inhibits bacterial quorum sensing signal transmission by interfering with quorum sensing regulator folding

Authors
Kim, JisunPark, Woojun
Issue Date
Dec-2013
Publisher
SOC GENERAL MICROBIOLOGY
Citation
MICROBIOLOGY-SGM, v.159, pp.2616 - 2625
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
MICROBIOLOGY-SGM
Volume
159
Start Page
2616
End Page
2625
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/101430
DOI
10.1099/mic.0.070615-0
ISSN
1350-0872
Abstract
Quorum sensing (QS)-dependent biofilm formation and motility were controlled by AqsR in Acinetobacter oleivorans DR1. QS-controlled phenotypes appeared to be inhibited by indole and the aqsR mutant had the same phenotypes. We demonstrated that the turnover rate of AgsR became more rapid without the N-acylhomoserine lactone (AHL) signal, and that indole could increase the expression of many protease and chaperone proteins. The addition of exogenous indole decreased the expression of two AgsR-targeted genes: AOLE_03905 (putative surface adhesion protein) and AOLE_11355 (L-asparaginase). The overexpression of AgsR in Escherichia coli was impossible with the indole treatment. Surprisingly, our [S-35]methionine pulse-labelling data demonstrated that the stability and folding of AqsR protein decreased in the presence of indole without changing aqsR mRNA expression in E. coll. Interestingly, indole resulted in a loss of TraR-dependent traG expression in an Agrobacterium tumefaciens indicator strain. However, when indole was added after incubation with exogenous AHL, indole could not inhibit the TraR-dependent expression of the traG promoter. This indicated that AHL-bound TraR could be protective against indole, but TraR without AHL could not be active in the presence of indole. Here, we provided evidence for the first time showing that the indole effect on QS-controlled bacterial phenotypes is due to inhibited QS regulator folding and not a reduced QS signal.
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