RssAB-FlhDC-ShlBA as a Major Pathogenesis Pathway in Serratia marcescens (original) (raw)

RssAB Signaling Coordinates Early Development of Surface Multicellularity in Serratia marcescens

PLoS ONE, 2011

Bacteria can coordinate several multicellular behaviors in response to environmental changes. Among these, swarming and biofilm formation have attracted significant attention for their correlation with bacterial pathogenicity. However, little is known about when and where the signaling occurs to trigger either swarming or biofilm formation. We have previously identified an RssAB two-component system involved in the regulation of swarming motility and biofilm formation in Serratia marcescens. Here we monitored the RssAB signaling status within single cells by tracing the location of the translational fusion protein EGFP-RssB following development of swarming or biofilm formation. RssAB signaling is specifically activated before surface migration in swarming development and during the early stage of biofilm formation. The activation results in the release of RssB from its cognate inner membrane sensor kinase, RssA, to the cytoplasm where the downstream gene promoters are located. Such dynamic localization of RssB requires phosphorylation of this regulator. By revealing the temporal activation of RssAB signaling following development of surface multicellular behavior, our findings contribute to an improved understanding of how bacteria coordinate their lifestyle on a surface.

Regulation of Swarming Motility and flhDCSm Expression by RssAB Signaling in Serratia marcescens

Journal of Bacteriology, 2008

Serratia marcescens cells swarm at 30°C but not at 37°C, and the underlying mechanism is not characterized. Our previous studies had shown that a temperature upshift from 30 to 37°C reduced the expression levels of flhDC Sm and hag Sm in S. marcescens CH-1. Mutation in rssA or rssB , cognate genes that comprise a two-component system, also resulted in precocious swarming phenotypes at 37°C. To further characterize the underlying mechanism, in the present study, we report that expression of flhDC Sm and synthesis of flagella are significantly increased in the rssA mutant strain at 37°C. Primer extension analysis for determination of the transcriptional start site(s) of flhDC Sm revealed two transcriptional start sites, P1 and P2, in S. marcescens CH-1. Characterization of the phosphorylated RssB (RssB∼P) binding site by an electrophoretic mobility shift assay showed direct interaction of RssB∼P, but not unphosphorylated RssB [RssB(D51E)], with the P2 promoter region. A DNase I footpr...

Biochemical Characterization of RssA-RssB, a Two-Component Signal Transduction System Regulating Swarming Behavior in Serratia marcescens

Journal of Bacteriology, 2005

Our previous study had identified a pair of potential two-component signal transduction proteins, RssA-RssB, involved in the regulation of Serratia marcescens swarming. When mutated, both rssA and rssB mutants showed precocious swarming phenotypes on LB swarming agar, whereby swarming not only occurred at 37°C but also initiated on a surface of higher agar concentration and more rapidly than did the parent strain at 30°C. In this study, we further show that the predicted sensor kinase RssA and the response regulator RssB bear characteristics of components of the phosphorelay signaling system. In vitro phosphorylation and site-directed mutagenesis assays showed that phosphorylated RssA transfers the phosphate group to RssB and that histidine 248 and aspartate 51 are essential amino acid residues involved in the phosphotransfer reactions in RssA and RssB, respectively. Accordingly, while wild-type rssA could, the mutated rssA (H248A) in trans could not complement the precocious swarmi...

The RssAB Two-Component Signal Transduction System in Serratia marcescens Regulates Swarming Motility and Cell Envelope Architecture in Response to Exogenous Saturated Fatty Acids

Journal of Bacteriology, 2005

Serratia marcescens swarms at 30°C but not at 37°C on a nutrient-rich (LB) agar surface. Mini-Tn5 mutagenesis of S. marcescens CH-1 yielded a mutant (WC100) that swarms not only vigorously at 37°C but also earlier and faster than the parent strain swarms at 30°C. Analysis of this mutant revealed that the transposon was inserted into a gene (rssA) predicted to encode a bacterial two-component signal transduction sensor kinase, upstream of which a potential response regulator gene (rssB) was located. rssA and rssB insertiondeletion mutants were constructed through homologous recombination, and the two mutants exhibited similar swarming phenotypes on LB swarming agar, in which swarming not only occurred at 37°C but also initiated at a lower cell density, on a surface with a higher agar concentration, and more rapidly than the swarming of the parent strain at 30°C. Both mutants also exhibited increased hemolysin activity and altered cell surface topologies compared with the parent CH-1 strain. Temperature and certain saturated fatty acids (SFAs) were found to negatively regulate S. marcescens swarming via the action of RssA-RssB. Analysis of the fatty acid profiles of the parent and the rssA and rssB mutants grown at 30°C or 37°C and under different nutrition conditions revealed a relationship between cellular fatty acid composition and swarming phenotypes. The cellular fatty acid profile was also observed to be affected by RssA and RssB. SFA-dependent inhibition of swarming was also observed in Proteus mirabilis, suggesting that either SFAs per se or the modulation of cellular fatty acid composition and hence homeostasis of membrane fluidity may be a conserved mechanism for regulating swarming motility in gram-negative bacteria.

A Serratia marcescens PigP Homolog Controls Prodigiosin Biosynthesis, Swarming Motility and Hemolysis and Is Regulated by cAMP-CRP and HexS

PLoS ONE, 2013

Swarming motility and hemolysis are virulence-associated determinants for a wide array of pathogenic bacteria. The broad host-range opportunistic pathogen Serratia marcescens produces serratamolide, a small cyclic amino-lipid, that promotes swarming motility and hemolysis. Serratamolide is negatively regulated by the transcription factors HexS and CRP. Positive regulators of serratamolide production are unknown. Similar to serratamolide, the antibiotic pigment, prodigiosin, is regulated by temperature, growth phase, HexS, and CRP. Because of this co-regulation, we tested the hypothesis that a homolog of the PigP transcription factor of the atypical Serratia species ATCC 39006, which positively regulates prodigiosin biosynthesis, is also a positive regulator of serratamolide production in S. marcescens. Mutation of pigP in clinical, environmental, and laboratory strains of S. marcescens conferred pleiotropic phenotypes including the loss of swarming motility, hemolysis, and severely reduced prodigiosin and serratamolide synthesis. Transcriptional analysis and electrophoretic mobility shift assays place PigP in a regulatory pathway with upstream regulators CRP and HexS. The data from this study identifies a positive regulator of serratamolide production, describes novel roles for the PigP transcription factor, shows for the first time that PigP directly regulates the pigment biosynthetic operon, and identifies upstream regulators of pigP. This study suggests that PigP is important for the ability of S. marcescens to compete in the environment. Citation: Shanks RMQ, Lahr RM, Stella NA, Arena KE, Brothers KM, et al. (2013) A Serratia marcescens PigP Homolog Controls Prodigiosin Biosynthesis, Swarming Motility and Hemolysis and Is Regulated by cAMP-CRP and HexS. PLoS ONE 8(3): e57634.

Signaling-mediated cross-talk modulates swarming and biofilm formation in a coral pathogen Serratia marcescens

The ISME Journal, 2011

Interactions within microbial communities associated with marine holobionts contribute importantly to the health of these symbiotic organisms formed by invertebrates, dinoflagellates and bacteria. However, mechanisms that control invertebrate-associated microbiota are not yet fully understood. Hydrophobic compounds that were isolated from surfaces of asymptomatic corals inhibited biofilm formation by the white pox pathogen Serratia marcescens PDL100, indicating that signals capable of affecting the associated microbiota are produced in situ. However, neither the origin nor structures of these signals are currently known. A functional survey of bacteria recovered from coral mucus and from cultures of the dinoflagellate Symbiodinium spp. revealed that they could alter swarming and biofilm formation in S. marcescens. As swarming and biofilm formation are inversely regulated, the ability of some native a-proteobacteria to affect both behaviors suggests that the a-proteobacterial signal(s) target a global regulatory switch controlling the behaviors in the pathogen. Isolates of Marinobacter sp. inhibited both biofilm formation and swarming in S. marcescens PDL100, without affecting growth of the coral pathogen, indicative of the production of multiple inhibitors, likely targeting lower level regulatory genes or functions. A multi-species cocktail containing these strains inhibited progression of a disease caused by S. marcescens in a model polyp Aiptasia pallida. An a-proteobacterial isolate 44B9 had a similar effect. Even though B4% of native holobiont-associated bacteria produced compounds capable of triggering responses in well-characterized N-acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) biosensors, there was no strong correlation between the production of AHL-like signals and disruption of biofilms or swarming in S. marcescens.

Serratamolide is a Hemolytic Factor Produced by Serratia marcescens

PLoS ONE, 2012

Serratia marcescens is a common contaminant of contact lens cases and lenses. Hemolytic factors of S. marcescens contribute to the virulence of this opportunistic bacterial pathogen. We took advantage of an observed hyper-hemolytic phenotype of crp mutants to investigate mechanisms of hemolysis. A genetic screen revealed that swrW is necessary for the hyper-hemolysis phenotype of crp mutants. The swrW gene is required for biosynthesis of the biosurfactant serratamolide, previously shown to be a broad-spectrum antibiotic and to contribute to swarming motility. Multicopy expression of swrW or mutation of the hexS transcription factor gene, a known inhibitor of swrW expression, led to an increase in hemolysis. Surfactant zones and expression from an swrW-transcriptional reporter were elevated in a crp mutant compared to the wild type. Purified serratamolide was hemolytic to sheep and murine red blood cells and cytotoxic to human airway and corneal limbal epithelial cells in vitro. The swrW gene was found in the majority of contact lens isolates tested. Genetic and biochemical analysis implicate the biosurfactant serratamolide as a hemolysin. This novel hemolysin may contribute to irritation and infections associated with contact lens use.

Subcellular location and unique secretion of the hemolysin of Serratia marcescens

The Journal of biological chemistry, 1989

It is shown that Serratia marcescens exports a hemolysin to the cell surface and secretes it to the extracellular space. Escherichia coli containing the cloned hemolysin genes shlA and shlB exported and secreted the S. marcescens hemolysin. A nonhemolytic secretion-incompetent precursor of the hemolysin, designated ShlA*, was synthesized in a shlB deletion mutant and accumulated in the periplasmic space of E. coli. Immunogold-labeled ultrathin sections revealed ShlA* bound to the outer face of the cytoplasmic membrane and to the inner face of the outer membrane. A number of mutants carrying 3' deletions in the shlA gene secreted truncated polypeptides, the smallest of which contained only 261 of the 1578 amino acids of the mature ShlA hemolysin, showing that the information for export to the cell surface of E. coli and secretion into the culture medium is located in the NH2-terminal segment of the hemolysin. We propose a secretion pathway in which ShlA and ShlB are exported acro...

Inactivation of the Major Hemolysin Gene Influences Expression of the Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetase Gene swrA in the Insect Pathogen Serratia sp. Strain SCBI

Journal of Bacteriology, 2017

Hemolysins are important virulence factors for many bacterial pathogens, including Serratia marcescens . The role of the major hemolysin gene in the insect pathogen Serratia sp. strain SCBI was investigated using both forward and reverse-genetics approaches. Introduction of the major hemolysin gene into Escherichia coli resulted in a gain of both virulence and hemolytic activity. Inactivation of this hemolysin in Serratia sp. SCBI resulted in a loss of hemolysis but did not attenuate insecticidal activity. Unexpectedly, inactivation of the hemolysin gene in Serratia sp. SCBI resulted in significantly increased motility and increased antimicrobial activity. Reverse transcription-quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR) analysis of mutants with a disrupted hemolysin gene showed a dramatic increase in mRNA levels of a nonribosomal peptide synthetase gene, swrA , which produces the surfactant serrawettin W2. Mutation of the swrA gene in Serratia sp. SCBI resulted in highly varied antibiotic activity,...

Membrane fluidity optimization regulates swarming through modulation of a two-component signal transduction thermosensor in Serratia marcescens

2000

Serratia marcescens swarming behavior is thermoregulated, which is characterized by continuous populational surface migration on rich swarming agar surface at 30°C, but not at 37°C. Here we report that environmental temperature shift and fatty acids (especially the saturated fatty acids, SFAs) act as the signal cues regulating S. marcescens swarming through an RssA-RssB two component signal transduction system. SFAs or temperature upshift specifically and negatively regulate S. marcescens swarming, but not swimming motility or the identified factors known to be involved in Serratia swarming, possibly through influencing pattern of cellular fatty acid profile. Fatty acid profile analysis strongly indicates that addition of SFAs at a constant temperature and temperature upshift may either directly or indirectly affect the signaling state of the RssA sensor protein by increasing the incorporation of the high-melting point fatty acids into membrane phospholipid, which subsequently inhibits S. marcescens swarming. The RssA-RssB two-component system mediates this response, as both partners are required to sense and transduce the signals. Expression of a fatty acid synthesis gene fabG and a hemolysin gene shlA is coordinately regulated with swarming by RssA-RssB. Biofilm formation, cell surface structure and extracellular polysaccharide are also affected in the rssA or rssB mutant. Similar phenomena of SFA inhibition are also observed in swarming regulation of Proteus mirabilis and Salmonella typhimurium. Thus, evidence suggests it may be common that membrane fluidity optimization through modulation of cellular fatty acid profile under different physiological culture conditions may subsequently affect two-component signaling pathway, which regulates the composition of cellular fatty acids, expression of virulence factor and multicellular swarming behaviours. This may provide an unidentified and common regulatory circuit for controlling swarming behaviour of not only S. marcescens, but also other swarming bacteria.