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Swarmer Cell Development of the Bacterium Proteus mirabilis Requires the Conserved Enterobacterial Common Antigen Biosynthesis Gene . | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how individual cells of a bacterium elongate significantly before beginning a cooperative movement known as swarming, and identifies the key gene involved in this process.
  • The gene encodes a protein linked to the structure of the bacterial cell envelope, which is crucial for maintaining cell shape and integrity.
  • The research highlights the role of the RcsB regulator in managing stress response pathways and supporting cell morphology, suggesting that the integrity of the cell envelope is essential before cells can start to elongate and swarm.

Article Abstract

Individual cells of the bacterium can elongate up to 40-fold on surfaces before engaging in a cooperative surface-based motility termed swarming. How cells regulate this dramatic morphological remodeling remains an open question. In this paper, we move forward the understanding of this regulation by demonstrating that requires the gene for swarmer cell elongation and subsequent swarm motility. The gene encodes a protein homologous to the dTDP-glucose 4,6-dehydratase protein of , which contributes to enterobacterial common antigen biosynthesis. Here, we characterize the gene in , demonstrating that it is required for the production of large lipopolysaccharide-linked moieties necessary for wild-type cell envelope integrity. We show that the absence of the gene induces several stress response pathways, including those controlled by the transcriptional regulators RpoS, CaiF, and RcsB. We further show that in -deficient cells, the suppression of the Rcs phosphorelay, via loss of RcsB, is sufficient to induce cell elongation and swarm motility. However, the loss of RcsB does not rescue cell envelope integrity defects and instead results in abnormally shaped cells, including cells producing more than two poles. We conclude that an RcsB-mediated response acts to suppress the emergence of shape defects in cell envelope-compromised cells, suggesting an additional role for RcsB in maintaining cell morphology under stress conditions. We further propose that the composition of the cell envelope acts as a checkpoint before cells initiate swarmer cell elongation and motility. swarm motility has been implicated in pathogenesis. We have found that cells deploy multiple uncharacterized strategies to handle cell envelope stress beyond the Rcs phosphorelay when attempting to engage in swarm motility. While RcsB is known to directly inhibit the master transcriptional regulator for swarming, we have shown an additional role for RcsB in protecting cell morphology. These data support a growing appreciation that the Rcs phosphorelay is a multifunctional regulator of cell morphology in addition to its role in microbial stress responses. These data also strengthen the paradigm that outer membrane composition is a crucial checkpoint for modulating entry into swarm motility. Furthermore, the -dependent moieties provide a novel attractive target for potential antimicrobials.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6112005PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.00230-18DOI Listing

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