Abstract
Strategies to both monitor and block bacterial quorum sensing (QS), and thus associated infections, are of significant interest. We developed a straightforward assay to monitor biosurfactants and lytic agents produced by bacteria under the control of QS. The method is based on the lysis of synthetic lipid vesicles containing the environmentally sensitive fluorescent dye calcein. This assay allows for the in situ screening of compounds capable of altering biosurfactant production by bacteria, and thereby the identification of molecules that could potentially modulate QS pathways, and avoids the constraints of many of the cell-based assays in use today. Application of this assay in a high-throughput format revealed five molecules capable of blocking vesicle lysis by S.aureus. Two of these compounds were found to almost completely inhibit agr-based QS in S.aureus and represent the most potent small-molecule-derived QS inhibitors reported in this formidable pathogen.
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