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A Duo of Potassium-Responsive Histidine Kinases Govern the Multicellular Destiny of Bacillus subtilis.

Roberto R GrauPaula de OñaMaritta KunertCecilia LeñiniRamses Gallegos-MonterrosaEisha MhatreDarío ViletaVerónica DonatoTheresa HölscherWillhelm BolandOscar P KuipersÁkos T Kovács
Published in: mBio (2015)
Alternation between motile and sessile behaviors is central to bacterial adaptation, survival, and colonization. However, how is the collective decision to move over or stay attached to a surface controlled? Here, we use the model plant-beneficial bacterium Bacillus subtilis to answer this question. Remarkably, we discover that sessile biofilm formation and social sliding motility share the same structural components and the Spo0A regulatory network via sensor kinases, KinB and KinC. Potassium, an inhibitor of KinC-dependent biofilm formation, triggers sliding via a potassium-perceiving cytosolic domain of KinB that resembles the selectivity filter of potassium channels. The spatiotemporal response of these kinases to variable potassium levels and the gradual increase in Spo0A~Pi levels that orchestrates the activation of sliding before biofilm formation shed light on how multicellular behaviors formerly believed to be antagonistic work together to benefit the population fitness.
Keyphrases
  • biofilm formation
  • bacillus subtilis
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • candida albicans
  • escherichia coli
  • cystic fibrosis
  • healthcare
  • body composition
  • transcription factor
  • drug delivery
  • decision making