Publication | Open Access
“Quorum Non-Sensing”: Social Cheating and Deception in Vibrio cholerae
42
Citations
29
References
2015
Year
BacteriologyDisease OutbreakBacterial PathogenesisBiofilm FormationPathogen TransmissionVibrio CholeraeMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyInfection ControlAntimicrobial ResistanceQuorum SensingVirulence FactorMolecular MicrobiologyBiologyAntimicrobial Resistance GeneSocial BehaviorDisease TransmissionMicrobiologyMedicine
Quorum sensing (QS) is widely used by bacteria to coordinate behavior in response to external stimuli. In Vibrio cholerae, this process is important for environmental survival and pathogenesis, though, intriguingly, a large percentage of natural isolates are QS deficient. Here, we show that QS-deficient mutants can spread as social cheaters by ceasing production of extracellular proteases under conditions requiring their growth. We further show that mutants stimulate biofilm formation and are over-represented in biofilms compared to planktonic communities; on this basis, we suggest that QS-deficient mutants may have the side effect of enhancing environmental tolerance of natural populations due to the inherent resistance properties of biofilms. Interestingly, high frequencies of QS-deficient individuals did not impact production of QS signaling molecules despite mutants being unable to respond to these inducers, indicating that these variants actively cheat by false signaling under conditions requiring QS. Taken together, our results suggest that social cheating may drive QS deficiency emergence within V. cholerae natural populations.
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