Poor clinical outcomes (disfigurement, amputation, and death) and significant economic losses in the aquaculture industry can be attributed to the potent opportunistic human pathogen , as well as the bivalves (oysters) it naturally colonizes, is indigenous to estuaries and human-inhabited coastal regions and must endure constantly changing environmental conditions as freshwater and seawater enter, mix, and exit the water column. Elevated cellular c-di-GMP levels trigger biofilm formation, but relatively little is known regarding the environmental signals that initiate this response. Here, we show that calcium is a primary environmental signal that specifically increases intracellular c-di-GMP concentrations, which in turn triggers expression of the extracellular polysaccharide that enhances biofilm formation. A transposon screen for the loss of calcium-induced expression revealed CysD, an enzyme in the sulfate assimilation pathway. Targeted disruption of the pathway indicated that the production of a specific metabolic intermediate, 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS), was required for calcium-induced expression and that PAPS was separately required for development of the physiologically distinct rugose phenotype. Thus, PAPS behaves as a second messenger in Moreover, c-di-GMP and BrpT (the activator of expression) acted in concert to bias expression of the sulfate assimilation pathway toward PAPS and c-di-GMP accumulation, establishing a feed-forward regulatory loop to boost expression. Thus, this signaling network links extracellular calcium and sulfur availability to the intracellular second messengers PAPS and c-di-GMP in the regulation of biofilm formation and rugosity, survival phenotypes underpinning its evolution as a resilient environmental organism. The second messenger c-di-GMP is a key regulator of bacterial physiology. The genome encodes nearly 100 proteins predicted to make, break, and bind c-di-GMP. However, relatively little is known regarding the environmental signals that regulate c-di-GMP levels and biofilm formation in Here, we identify calcium as a primary environmental signal that specifically increases intracellular c-di-GMP concentrations, which in turn triggers -mediated biofilm formation. We show that PAPS, a metabolic intermediate of the sulfate assimilation pathway, acts as a second messenger linking environmental calcium and sulfur source availability to the production of another intracellular second messenger (c-di-GMP) to regulate biofilm and rugose colony formation, developmental pathways that are associated with environmental persistence and efficient bivalve colonization by this potent human pathogen.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6113621PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01377-18DOI Listing

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