Membrane vesicles traffic signals and facilitate group activities in a prokaryote
- PMID: 16163359
- DOI: 10.1038/nature03925
Membrane vesicles traffic signals and facilitate group activities in a prokaryote
Abstract
Many bacteria use extracellular signals to communicate and coordinate social activities, a process referred to as quorum sensing. Many quorum signals have significant hydrophobic character, and how these signals are trafficked between bacteria within a population is not understood. Here we show that the opportunistic human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa packages the signalling molecule 2-heptyl-3-hydroxy-4-quinolone (pseudomonas quinolone signal; PQS) into membrane vesicles that serve to traffic this molecule within a population. Removal of these vesicles from the bacterial population halts cell-cell communication and inhibits PQS-controlled group behaviour. We also show that PQS actively mediates its own packaging and the packaging of other antimicrobial quinolines produced by P. aeruginosa into vesicles. These findings illustrate that a prokaryote possesses a signal trafficking system with features common to those used by higher organisms and outlines a novel mechanism for delivery of a signal critical for coordinating group behaviour in P. aeruginosa.
Comment in
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Microbiology: bacterial speech bubbles.Nature. 2005 Sep 15;437(7057):330. doi: 10.1038/437330a. Nature. 2005. PMID: 16163338 No abstract available.
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