Publication | Open Access
<scp>CdiA</scp> promotes receptor‐independent intercellular adhesion
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Citations
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References
2015
Year
Cell AdhesionImmunologyBacteriologyMolecular BiologyCellular PhysiologyBacterial PathogenesisCell InteractionPathogen BiologyMatrix BiologyCell SignalingHost-pathogen InteractionsCdia FilamentVirulence FactorReceptor‐independent Intercellular AdhesionBiomolecular InteractionMolecular MicrobiologyCdia-receptor InteractionsCell BiologySignal TransductionPathogenesisMicrobiologyMedicineHomotypic Cdia-cdia InteractionsExtracellular Matrix
CdiB/CdiA proteins mediate inter-bacterial competition in a process termed contact-dependent growth inhibition (CDI). Filamentous CdiA exoproteins extend from CDI(+) cells and bind specific receptors to deliver toxins into susceptible target bacteria. CDI has also been implicated in auto-aggregation and biofilm formation in several species, but the contribution of CdiA-receptor interactions to these multi-cellular behaviors has not been examined. Using Escherichia coli isolate EC93 as a model, we show that cdiA and bamA receptor mutants are defective in biofilm formation, suggesting a prominent role for CdiA-BamA mediated cell-cell adhesion. However, CdiA also promotes auto-aggregation in a BamA-independent manner, indicating that the exoprotein possesses an additional adhesin activity. Cells must express CdiA in order to participate in BamA-independent aggregates, suggesting that adhesion could be mediated by homotypic CdiA-CdiA interactions. The BamA-dependent and BamA-independent interaction domains map to distinct regions within the CdiA filament. Thus, CdiA orchestrates a collective behavior that is independent of its growth-inhibition activity. This adhesion should enable 'greenbeard' discrimination, in which genetically unrelated individuals cooperate with one another based on a single shared trait. This kind-selective social behavior could provide immediate fitness benefits to bacteria that acquire the systems through horizontal gene transfer.
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