Abstract
Bacteria have a remarkable ability to survive, persist, and ultimately adapt to environmental challenges. A ubiquitous environmental hazard is DNA damage, and most bacteria have evolved a network of genes to combat genotoxic stress. This network is known as the SOS response and aids in bacterial survival by regulating genes involved in DNA repair and damage tolerance. Recently, the SOS response has been shown to play an important role in bacterial pathogenesis, and yet the role of the SOS response in nonpathogenic organisms and in physiological settings remains underexplored. Using a commensal Escherichia coli strain, MP1, we showed that the SOS response plays a vital role during colonization of the murine gut. In an unperturbed environment, the SOS-off mutant is impaired for stable colonization relative to a wild-type strain, suggesting the presence of genotoxic stress in the mouse gut. We evaluated the possible origins of genotoxic stress in the mouse gut by examining factors associated with the host versus the competing commensal organisms. In a dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) colitis model, the SOS-off colonization defect persisted but was not exacerbated. In contrast, in a germ-free model, the SOS-off mutant colonized with efficiency equal to that seen with the wild-type strain, suggesting that competing commensal organisms might be a significant source of genotoxic stress. This report extends our understanding of the importance of a functional SOS response for bacterial fitness in the context of a complex physiological environment and highlights the SOS response as a possible mechanism that contributes to ongoing genomic changes, including potential antibiotic resistance, in the microbiome of healthy hosts.
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