Abstract

ABSTRACTIn microbial communities, bacteria chemically and physically interact with one another. Some of these interactions are mediated by secreted specialized metabolites that act as either intraspecies or interspecies signals to alter gene expression and to change cell physiology. Bacillus subtilis is a well-characterized soil microbe that can differentiate into multiple cell types, including metabolically dormant endospores. We were interested in identifying microbial interactions that affected sporulation in B. subtilis. Using a fluorescent transcriptional reporter, we observed that coculturing B. subtilis with Escherichia coli promoted sporulation gene expression via a secreted metabolite. To identify the active compound, we screened the E. coli Keio Collection and identified the sporulation-accelerating cue as the siderophore enterobactin. B. subtilis has multiple iron acquisition systems that are used to take up the B. subtilis-produced siderophore bacillibactin, as well as to pirate exogenous siderophores such as enterobactin. While B. subtilis uses a single substrate binding protein (FeuA) to take up both bacillibactin and enterobactin, we discovered that it requires two distinct genes to sporulate in response to these siderophores (the esterase gene besA for bacillibactin and a putative esterase gene, ybbA, for enterobactin). In addition, we found that siderophores from a variety of other microbial species also promote sporulation in B. subtilis. Our results thus demonstrate that siderophores can act not only as bacterial iron acquisition systems but also as interspecies cues that alter cellular development and accelerate sporulation in B. subtilis.IMPORTANCE While much is known about the genetic regulation of Bacillus subtilis sporulation, little is understood about how other bacteria influence this process. This work describes an interaction between Escherichia coli and B. subtilis that accelerates sporulation in B. subtilis. The interaction is mediated by the E. coli siderophore enterobactin; we show that other species' siderophores also promote sporulation gene expression in B. subtilis. These results suggest that siderophores not only may supply bacteria with the mineral nutrient iron but also may play a role in bacterial interspecies signaling, providing a cue for sporulation. Siderophores are produced by many bacterial species and thus potentially play important roles in altering bacterial cell physiology in diverse environments.

Highlights

  • In microbial communities, bacteria chemically and physically interact with one another

  • The interaction is mediated by the E. coli siderophore enterobactin; we show that other species’ siderophores promote sporulation gene expression in B. subtilis

  • The 0.1ϫ LB-Lennox agar medium was selected for our assays because it is relatively nutrient poor but is still able to support the growth of diverse microbes; it was preferred over the medium typically used to investigate sporulation, i.e., Difco sporulation medium (DSM), because spores form too rapidly in DSM, limiting our ability to identify microbial promotion of sporulation

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Summary

Introduction

Bacteria chemically and physically interact with one another. The interaction is mediated by the E. coli siderophore enterobactin; we show that other species’ siderophores promote sporulation gene expression in B. subtilis These results suggest that siderophores may supply bacteria with the mineral nutrient iron and may play a role in bacterial interspecies signaling, providing a cue for sporulation. We predicted that other microbial metabolites might have the ability to alter B. subtilis sporulation To identify such metabolites, we used a B. subtilis strain containing a fluorescent transcriptional reporter in which the promoter for sspB (PsspB), a gene encoding a protein that is highly upregulated during the committed stage of sporulation [19, 20], drives expression of the gene encoding the yellow fluorescent protein (yfp). Using an E. coli knockout library, we further determined that this interaction is dependent on production of the siderophore enterobactin

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