Abstract

Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a significant threat in both healthcare and industrial biofouling. Surface attachment of P. aeruginosa is particularly problematic as surface association induces virulence and is necessary for the ensuing process of biofilm formation, which hampers antibiotic treatments. Previous efforts have searched for dispersal agents of mature biofilm collectives, but there are no known factors that specifically disperse individual surface-attached P. aeruginosa. In this study, we develop a quantitative single-cell surface-dispersal assay and use it to show that P. aeruginosa itself produces factors that can stimulate its dispersal. Through bioactivity-guided fractionation, mass spectrometry, and nuclear magnetic resonance, we elucidated the structure of one such factor, 2-methyl-4-hydroxyquinoline (MHQ). MHQ is an alkyl quinolone with a previously unknown activity and is synthesized by the PqsABC enzymes. Pure MHQ is sufficient to disperse P. aeruginosa, but the dispersal activity of natural P. aeruginosa conditioned media requires additional factors. Whereas other alkyl quinolones have been shown to act as antibiotics or membrane depolarizers, MHQ lacks these activities and known antibiotics do not induce dispersal. In contrast, we show that MHQ inhibits the activity of Type IV Pili (TFP) and that TFP targeting can explain its dispersal activity. Our work thus identifies single-cell surface dispersal as a new activity of P. aeruginosa-produced small molecules, characterizes MHQ as a promising dispersal agent, and establishes TFP inhibition as a viable mechanism for P. aeruginosa dispersal.

Highlights

  • One of the major causes of a wide variety of HAIs is the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa [1, 2]

  • We show that MHQ is synthesized by enzymes in the Pseudomonas quinolone signaling (PQS) pathway

  • Since P. aeruginosa is known to produce a staggering array of secreted secondary metabolites with a variety of biological functions, we investigated whether it might produce a compound that would cause cells to detach from a surface

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Summary

Introduction

One of the major causes of a wide variety of HAIs is the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa [1, 2]. We find that MHQ inhibits TFP pilus activity, potentially explaining how MHQ causes dispersal of P. aeruginosa from the surface. To determine when P. aeruginosa produces a dispersal signal, we used the DISPEL assay to test the dispersal activity of cells from different growth phases.

Results
Conclusion
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