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RpoS is a pleiotropic regulator of motility, biofilm formation, exoenzymes, siderophore and prodigiosin production, and trade-off during prolonged stationary phase in Serratia marcescens
Author(s) -
Han Qin,
Ying Li,
Xiyue Cao,
Jia Jiang,
Weishao Lian,
Dan Qiao,
Hui Xu,
Yi Cao
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0232549
Subject(s) - prodigiosin , serratia marcescens , rpos , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , mutant , biofilm , serratia , bacteria , biochemistry , genetics , gene , escherichia coli , promoter , pseudomonas , gene expression
Prodigiosin is an important secondary metabolite produced by Serratia marcescens . It can help strains resist stresses from other microorganisms and environmental factors to achieve self-preservation. Prodigiosin is also a promising secondary metabolite due to its pharmacological characteristics. However, pigmentless S . marcescens mutants always emerge after prolonged starvation, which might be a way for the bacteria to adapt to starvation conditions, but it could be a major problem in the industrial application of S . marcescens . To identify the molecular mechanisms of loss of prodigiosin production, two mutants were isolated after 16 days of prolonged incubation of wild-type (WT) S . marcescens 1912768R; one mutant (named 1912768WR) exhibited reduced production of prodigiosin, and a second mutant (named 1912768W) was totally defective. Comparative genomic analysis revealed that the two mutants had either mutations or deletions in rpoS . Knockout of rpoS in S . marcescens 1912768R had pleiotropic effects. Complementation of rpoS in the Δ rpoS mutant further confirmed that RpoS was a positive regulator of prodigiosin production and that its regulatory role in prodigiosin biosynthesis was opposite that in Serratia sp. ATCC 39006, which had a different type of pig cluster; further, rpoS from Serratia sp. ATCC 39006 and other strains complemented the prodigiosin defect of the Δ rpoS mutant, suggesting that the pig promoters are more important than the genes in the regulation of prodigiosin production. Deletion of rpoS strongly impaired the resistance of S . marcescens to stresses but increased membrane permeability for nutritional competence; competition assays in rich and minimum media showed that the Δ rpoS mutant outcompeted its isogenic WT strain. All these data support the idea that RpoS is pleiotropic and that the loss of prodigiosin biosynthesis in S . marcescens 1912768R during prolonged incubation is due to a mutation in rpoS , which appears to be a self-preservation and nutritional competence (SPANC) trade-off.

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