Abstract

ABSTRACTVibrio vulnificus is an opportunistic human pathogen and autochthonous inhabitant of coastal marine environments, where the bacterium is under constant predation by heterotrophic protists or protozoans. As a result of this selection pressure, genetic variants with antipredation mechanisms are selected for and persist in the environment. Such natural variants may also be pathogenic to animal or human hosts, making it important to understand these defense mechanisms. To identify antipredator strategies, 13 V. vulnificus strains of different genotypes isolated from diverse environments were exposed to predation by the ciliated protozoan Tetrahymena pyriformis, and only strain ENV1 was resistant to predation. Further investigation of the cell-free supernatant showed that ENV1 acidifies the environment by the excretion of organic acids, which are toxic to T. pyriformis. As this predation resistance was dependent on the availability of iron, transcriptomes of V. vulnificus in iron-replete and iron-deplete conditions were compared. This analysis revealed that ENV1 ferments pyruvate and the resultant acetyl-CoA leads to acetate synthesis under aerobic conditions, a hallmark of overflow metabolism. The anaerobic respiration global regulator arcA was upregulated when iron was available. An ΔarcA deletion mutant of ENV1 accumulated less acetate and, importantly, was sensitive to grazing by T. pyriformis. Based on the transcriptome response and quantification of metabolites, we conclude that ENV1 has adapted to overflow metabolism and has lost a control switch that shifts metabolism from acetate excretion to acetate assimilation, enabling it to excrete acetate continuously. We show that overflow metabolism and the acetate switch contribute to prey-predator interactions.IMPORTANCE Bacteria in the environment, including Vibrio spp., interact with protozoan predators. To defend against predation, bacteria evolve antipredator mechanisms ranging from changing morphology, biofilm formation, and secretion of toxins or virulence factors. Some of these adaptations may result in strains that are pathogenic to humans. Therefore, it is important to study predator defense strategies of environmental bacteria. V. vulnificus thrives in coastal waters and infects humans. Very little is known about the defense mechanisms V. vulnificus expresses against predation. Here, we show that a V. vulnificus strain (ENV1) has rewired the central carbon metabolism, enabling the production of excess organic acid that is toxic to the protozoan predator T. pyriformis. This is a previously unknown mechanism of predation defense that protects against protozoan predators.

Highlights

  • Vibrio vulnificus is a Gram-negative, halophilic bacterium that thrives in warm marine and estuarine waters

  • By analysing the cell-free supernatants of ENV1, transcriptomic analysis and quantification of the excreted metabolites, we show that ENV1 has adapted to overflow metabolism by fermenting pyruvate to acetate, despite the presence of oxygen

  • V. vulnificus ENV1 is resistant to T. pyriformis predation

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Summary

Introduction

Vibrio vulnificus is a Gram-negative, halophilic bacterium that thrives in warm marine and estuarine waters. The bacterium is associated with opportunistic infections that include gastrointestinal infections caused by ingestion of raw or undercooked seafood as well as wound infections caused by exposure of wounds or broken skin to estuarine or seawater resulting in sepsis (1). More recent analysis of V. vulnificus genomes reveals that there are four major clusters (5) or five lineages (6)of strains. The strain studied here, Env belongs to cluster 2, lineage 2. The emergence and persistence of pathogenic strains from the environment is attributed in part, to evolutionary adaptations for protection against predation by protozoans (7-9). Bacteria possess multiple predator defence strategies including extracellular defences to avoid ingestion and intracellular defences that include toxin secretion that are ascribed to the origins of extracellular and intracellular pathogenesis (10)

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