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Quorum sensing is a mechanism of cell‐to‐cell communication that allows bacteria to coordinately regulate gene expression in response to changes in cell‐population density. At the core of the Vibrio cholerae quorum‐sensing signal transduction pathway reside four homologous small RNAs (sRNAs), named the quorum regulatory RNAs 1–4 (Qrr1–4). The four Qrr sRNAs are functionally redundant. That is, expression of any one of them is sufficient for wild‐type quorum‐sensing behaviour. Here, we show that the combined action of two feedback loops, one involving the sRNA‐activator LuxO and one involving the sRNA‐target HapR, promotes gene dosage compensation between the four qrr genes. Gene dosage compensation adjusts the total Qrr1–4 sRNA pool and provides the molecular mechanism underlying sRNA redundancy. The dosage compensation mechanism is exquisitely sensitive to small perturbations in Qrr levels. Precisely maintained Qrr levels are required to direct the proper timing and correct patterns of expression of quorum‐sensing‐regulated target genes.  相似文献   

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Bacteria are able “to sense” an increase in the cell population density and to respond to it by the induction of special sets of genes. This type of regulation, called Quorum Sensing (QS), includes the production and excretion of low-molecular-weight signaling molecules (autoinducers, AI), which diffuse readily through the cell wall, from cells into the medium. As the bacterial population reaches the critical level of density, the concentration of these signaling molecules in the medium increases as a function of population density. On reaching the critical threshold concentration, AIs bind to specific receptor regulatory proteins, which induce the expression of target genes. By means of AIs, bacteria accomplish the communication that is the transmission of information between bacteria belonging to the same or different species, genera, and even families: the signaling molecules of some bacteria affect the receptors of others causing a coordinated reply of cells of the bacterial population. Bacteria of different taxonomic groups use the QS systems in regulation of a broad range of physiological activities. These processes include virulence, symbiosis, conjugation, biofilm formation, bioluminescence, synthesis of enzymes, antibiotic substances, etc. Here we review different QS systems of bacteria, the role of QS in bacterial communication, and some applied aspects of QS regulation application.  相似文献   

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Expression of many bacterial genes is regulated in a cell density-dependent manner via small signal molecules known as autoinducers; this type of regulation is termed quorum sensing (QS). The QS systems that employ N-acyl-homoserine lactones (HSLs) are best un derstood in Gram-negative bacteria. QS regulates expression of various genes, including the genes responsible for the production of virulence factors, synthesis of exoenzymes and antibiotics, antagonistic properties of bacteria, etc. The QS systems of the genus Pseudomonas are linked to other global regulatory networks of the cell, and their functions are controlled by numerous additional regulatory factors. Such regulators and the QS systems together form an intricate multifactorial cascade regulatory network. The review considers the QS systems of several Pseudomonas species, their interaction with other regulatory systems, and their roles in the regulation of cell processes.  相似文献   

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Quorum-sensing (QS) allows bacterial communication to coordinate the production of extracellular products essential for population fitness at higher cell densities. It has been generally accepted that a significant time duration is required to reach appropriate cell density to activate the relevant quiescent genes encoding these costly but beneficial public goods. Which regulatory genes are involved and how these genes control bacterial communication at the early phases are largely un-explored. By determining time-dependent expression of QS-related genes of the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aerugionsa, we show that the induction of social cooperation could be critically influenced by environmental factors to optimize the density of population. In particular, small regulatory RNAs (RsmY and RsmZ) serving as early responders, can promote the expression of dependent genes (e.g. lasR) to boost the synthesis of intracellular enzymes and coordinate instant cooperative behavior in bacterial cells. These early responders, acting as a rheostat to finely modulate bacterial cooperation, which may be quickly activated under environment threats, but peter off when critical QS dependent genes are fully functional for cooperation. Our findings suggest that RsmY and RsmZ critically control the timing and levels of public goods production, which may have implications in sociomicrobiology and infection control.  相似文献   

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Bacteria use a chemical communication process called quorum sensing to monitor cell density and to alter behavior in response to fluctuations in population numbers. Previous studies with Vibrio harveyi have shown that LuxR, the master quorum-sensing regulator, activates and represses >600 genes. These include six genes that encode homologs of the Escherichia coli Bet and ProU systems for synthesis and transport, respectively, of glycine betaine, an osmoprotectant used during osmotic stress. Here we show that LuxR activates expression of the glycine betaine operon betIBA-proXWV, which enhances growth recovery under osmotic stress conditions. BetI, an autorepressor of the V. harveyi betIBA-proXWV operon, activates the expression of genes encoding regulatory small RNAs that control quorum-sensing transitions. Connecting quorum-sensing and glycine betaine pathways presumably enables V. harveyi to tune its execution of collective behaviors to its tolerance to stress.  相似文献   

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Bacteria are sensitive to an increase in population density and respond quickly and coordinately by induction of certain sets of genes. This mode of regulation, known as quorum sensing (QS), is based on the effect of low-molecular-weight signal molecules, autoinducers (AIs). When the population density is high, AIs accumulate in the medium and interact with regulatory receptor proteins. QS systems are global regulators of bacterial gene expression and play a key role in controlling many metabolic processes in the cell, including bacterial virulence. The review considers the molecular mechanisms of QS in different taxonomic groups of bacteria and discusses QS regulation as a possible target in treating bacterial infections. This is a new, alternative strategy of antibacterial therapy, which includes the construction of drugs acting directly against bacterial pathogenicity by suppressing QS (antipathogenicity drugs). This strategy makes it possible to avoid a wide distribution of antibiotic-resistant pathogenic bacteria and the formation of biofilms, which dramatically increase drug resistance.  相似文献   

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A plethora of RNAs with regulatory functions has been discovered in many non-pathogenic and pathogenic bacteria. In Staphylococcus aureus, recent findings show that a large variety of RNAs control target gene expression by diverse mechanisms and many of them are expressed in response to specific internal or external signals. These RNAs comprise trans-acting RNAs, which regulate gene expression through binding with mRNAs, and cis-acting regulatory regions of mRNAs. Some of them possess multiple functions and encode small but functional peptides. In this review, we will present several examples of RNAs regulating pathogenesis, antibiotic resistance, and host-pathogen interactions and will illustrate how regulatory proteins and RNAs form complex regulatory circuits to express the virulence factors in a dynamic manner.  相似文献   

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