New Bacterial Language Discovered
Bacteria communicate using chemical signals and now scientists have
described a previously unknown communication pathway that appears to be
widely distributed - and even leads to pathogens.
The investigation of bacterial communication is valuable because
those pathways are a possible therapeutic target for new medicines. If
the relevant communication options are prevented, the bacteria cannot
develop their pathogenic properties.
Different types of bacteria also have different methods of
communication. A team led by Dr. Helge B. Bode, a Merck-endowed
professor for molecular biotechnology at the Goethe University in
Frankfurt, and Dr. Ralf Heermann from the department of microbiology at
the Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich, had already discovered a new
bacterial communication pathway in 2013. Now they have succeeded in
decoding a further new and widely distributed chemical type of bacterial
communication.
To date, the best known communication between bacteria occurs via the
N-acyl homoserine lactone (AHL): The enzyme Luxl produces signals that
are recognised by the LuxR receptor, at which point the bacteria develop
certain properties and modulate their behaviour towards one another.
Since a certain number of bacteria must be available for this to occur,
this process is known as "quorum sensing".
"When pathogens are no longer destroyed by antibiotics as we have seen
to date, but rather be impaired beforehand the formation of the
pathogenic properties, the danger of resistance development would be
substantially reduced," says Bode.
However, Heermann's and Bode's working groups investigate bacteria
that possess a LuxR receptor, but not the enzyme Luxl. In the current
study, the microbiologists have investigated the bacteria Photorhabdus
asymbiotica, which is a deadly pathogen in insects, which also infects
humans and can cause skin infections.
These bacteria communicate via the signal molecule dialkylresorcinol,
which recognized the associated LuxR receptor. "The influence on the
pathogenic properties of the bacteria is at its strongest in this
'quorum sensing' system. P. asymbiotica requires dialkylresorcinol and
in this way coordinates the communication with the conspecifics for the
successful infection of the larvae," says Helge Bode, whose group in
2013 also described the biosynthesis of this new signal molecule.
The researchers have not only investigated P. asymbiotica, but also a
series of other bacterial genomes. The newly discovered signal pathway
appears to be widely distributed. "We were able to identify several
other bacteria that are pathogenic to humans that also do not express
Luxl and also possess this ability for forming these signals," says
Heerman.
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