The Self-Identity Protein IdsD Is Communicated between Cells in Swarming Proteus mirabilis Colonies.

J Bacteriol

Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

Published: December 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Proteus mirabilis recognizes its own and foreign cells through a process involving the Ids proteins, crucial for their social behavior in swarming colonies.
  • The IdsD protein must be transferred from one cell to another to allow for identity communication, while IdsE remains within the receiving cell.
  • This inter-cell communication influences the expansion of bacterial colonies without causing cell death, highlighting the role of social interactions in bacterial behavior.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Proteus mirabilis is a social bacterium that is capable of self (kin) versus nonself recognition. Swarming colonies of this bacterium expand outward on surfaces to centimeter-scale distances due to the collective motility of individual cells. Colonies of genetically distinct populations remain separate, while those of identical populations merge. Ids proteins are essential for this recognition behavior. Two of these proteins, IdsD and IdsE, encode identity information for each strain. These two proteins bind in vitro in an allele-restrictive manner. IdsD-IdsE binding is correlated with the merging of populations, whereas a lack of binding is correlated with the separation of populations. Key questions remained about the in vivo interactions of IdsD and IdsE, specifically, whether IdsD and IdsE bind within single cells or whether IdsD-IdsE interactions occur across neighboring cells and, if so, which of the two proteins is exchanged. Here we demonstrate that IdsD must originate from another cell to communicate identity and that this nonresident IdsD interacts with IdsE resident in the recipient cell. Furthermore, we show that unbound IdsD in recipient cells does not cause cell death and instead appears to contribute to a restriction in the expansion radius of the swarming colony. We conclude that P. mirabilis communicates IdsD between neighboring cells for nonlethal kin recognition, which suggests that the Ids proteins constitute a type of cell-cell communication.

Importance: We demonstrate that self (kin) versus nonself recognition in P. mirabilis entails the cell-cell communication of an identity-encoding protein that is exported from one cell and received by another. We further show that this intercellular exchange affects swarm colony expansion in a nonlethal manner, which adds social communication to the list of potential swarm-related regulatory factors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5116931PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.00402-16DOI Listing

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The Self-Identity Protein IdsD Is Communicated between Cells in Swarming Proteus mirabilis Colonies.

J Bacteriol

December 2016

Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

Article Synopsis
  • Proteus mirabilis recognizes its own and foreign cells through a process involving the Ids proteins, crucial for their social behavior in swarming colonies.
  • The IdsD protein must be transferred from one cell to another to allow for identity communication, while IdsE remains within the receiving cell.
  • This inter-cell communication influences the expansion of bacterial colonies without causing cell death, highlighting the role of social interactions in bacterial behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on the self-recognition mechanisms in bacteria, particularly the proteins IdsD and IdsE in Proteus mirabilis, revealing their role in strain-specific identity.
  • They discovered that these two proteins form a complex independently, with binding specificity determined by unique amino acid sequences.
  • The IdsD-IdsE interaction is tied to bacterial population behavior, indicating that it plays a crucial role in how these bacteria recognize themselves and interact socially.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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