Heterogeneity in phage induction enables the survival of the lysogenic population.

Environ Microbiol

Department of Microbiology, University of Barcelona, Diagonal 643, Annex, Floor 0, E-08028, Barcelona, Spain.

Published: March 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Lysogeny in bacteria, particularly in E. coli with Shiga toxin (Stx) phages, allows cells to gain unique functions and act as a refuge for phages, but can lead to a risk of bacterial extinction when phage lytic cycles are triggered.
  • The study shows that some E. coli lysogens manage to survive phage induction by splitting their population; some cells continue to maintain lysogeny while others lyse, producing and dispersing more Stx.
  • The research also indicates that the stress regulator RpoS plays a crucial role in managing phage induction, as overexpressing RpoS helps bacteria reduce Stx phage activation, thereby enhancing their survival during stressful conditions, a pattern

Article Abstract

Lysogeny by temperate phages provides novel functions for bacteria and shelter for phages. However, under conditions that activate the phage lytic cycle, the benefit of lysogeny becomes a paradox that poses a threat for bacterial population survival. Using Escherichia coli lysogens for Shiga toxin (Stx) phages as model, we demonstrate how lysogenic bacterial populations circumvent extinction after phage induction. A fraction of cells maintains lysogeny, allowing population survival, whereas the other fraction of cells lyse, increasing Stx production and spreading Stx phages. The uninduced cells were still lysogenic for the Stx phage and equally able to induce phages as the original cells, suggesting heterogeneity of the E. coli lysogenic population. The bacterial population can modulate phage induction under stress conditions by the stress regulator RpoS. Cells overexpressing RpoS reduce Stx phage induction and compete with and survive better than cells with baseline RpoS levels. Our observations suggest that population heterogeneity in phage induction could be widespread among other bacterial genera and we propose this is a mechanism positively selected to prevent the extinction of the lysogenic population that can be modulated by environmental conditions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13151DOI Listing

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