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Disrupting quorum sensing alters social interactions in Chromobacterium violaceum.

Sonia MionNathan CarriotJulien LopezLaure PlenerAnnick Ortalo-MagnéEric ChabrièreGérald CulioliDavid Daudé
Published in: NPJ biofilms and microbiomes (2021)
Quorum sensing (QS) is a communication system used by bacteria to coordinate a wide panel of biological functions in a cell density-dependent manner. The Gram-negative Chromobacterium violaceum has previously been shown to use an acyl-homoserine lactone (AHL)-based QS to regulate various behaviors, including the production of proteases, hydrogen cyanide, or antimicrobial compounds such as violacein. By using combined metabolomic and proteomic approaches, we demonstrated that QS modulates the production of antimicrobial and toxic compounds in C. violaceum ATCC 12472. We provided the first evidence of anisomycin antibiotic production by this strain as well as evidence of its regulation by QS and identified new AHLs produced by C. violaceum ATCC 12472. Furthermore, we demonstrated that targeting AHLs with lactonase leads to major QS disruption yielding significant molecular and phenotypic changes. These modifications resulted in drastic changes in social interactions between C. violaceum and a Gram-positive bacterium (Bacillus cereus), a yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), immune cells (murine macrophages), and an animal model (planarian Schmidtea mediterranea). These results underscored that AHL-based QS plays a key role in the capacity of C. violaceum to interact with micro- and macroorganisms and that quorum quenching can affect microbial population dynamics beyond AHL-producing bacteria and Gram-negative bacteria.
Keyphrases
  • gram negative
  • saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • multidrug resistant
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • escherichia coli
  • microbial community
  • drug delivery
  • fatty acid
  • single molecule
  • visible light