AI Article Synopsis

  • - The relationship between bioluminescent bacteria and bobtail squid helps researchers understand how bacteria grow and synthesize peptidoglycan (PG) in animal tissues, particularly in the squid's light-emitting organ.
  • - After the squid expels most bacteria daily, the remaining cells grow rapidly for about 6 hours before slowing down significantly overnight; during this slow-growth phase, PG synthesis decreases.
  • - In the least mature bacterial environment (Crypt 3), bacteria remained in a slow-growing state without dividing, while the gene responsible for PG remodeling was more active in mature environments (Crypt 1), indicating that PG modifications are crucial for bacterial survival during stress in symbiosis.

Article Abstract

The symbiotic relationship between the bioluminescent bacterium and the bobtail squid serves as a valuable system to investigate bacterial growth and peptidoglycan (PG) synthesis within animal tissues. To better understand the growth dynamics of in the crypts of the light-emitting organ of its juvenile host, we showed that, after the daily dawn-triggered expulsion of most of the population, the remaining symbionts rapidly proliferate for ∼6 h. At that point the population enters a period of extremely slow growth that continues throughout the night until the next dawn. Further, we found that PG synthesis by the symbionts decreases as they enter the slow-growing stage. Surprisingly, in contrast to the most mature crypts (i.e., Crypt 1) of juvenile animals, most of the symbiont cells in the least mature crypts (i.e., Crypt 3) were not expelled and, instead, remained in the slow-growing state throughout the day, with almost no cell division. Consistent with this observation, the expression of the gene encoding the PG-remodeling enzyme, L,D-transpeptidase (LdtA), was greatest during the slowly growing stage of Crypt 1 but, in contrast, remained continuously high in Crypt 3. Finally, deletion of the gene resulted in a symbiont that grew and survived normally in culture, but was increasingly defective in competing against its parent strain in the crypts. This result suggests that remodeling of the PG to generate additional 3-3 linkages contributes to the bacterium's fitness in the symbiosis, possibly in response to stresses encountered during the very slow-growing stage.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11238090PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.E24-01-0044DOI Listing

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