Spermidine Inversely Influences Surface Interactions and Planktonic Growth in Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
Yi WangSok Ho KimRamya NatarajanJason E HeindlEric L BrugerChristopher M WatersAnthony J MichaelClay FuquaPublished in: Journal of bacteriology (2016)
Polyamines are small, positively charged metabolites that are nearly ubiquitous in cellular life. They are often essential in eukaryotes and more variably in bacteria. Polyamines have been reported to influence the surface-attached biofilm formation of several bacteria. In Agrobacterium tumefaciens, mutants with diminished levels of the polyamine spermidine are stimulated for biofilm formation, and exogenous provision of spermidine decreases biofilm formation. Spermidine is also essential for A. tumefaciens growth, but the related polyamine norspermidine exogenously rescues growth and does not diminish biofilm formation, revealing that the growth requirement and biofilm control are separable. Polyamine control of biofilm formation appears to function via effects on the cellular second messenger cyclic diguanylate monophosphate, regulating the transition from a free-living to a surface-attached lifestyle.