Authors
Kara C Evans, Saida Benomar, Lennel A Camuy-Vélez, Ellen B Nasseri, Xiaofei Wang, Benjamin Neuenswander, Josephine R Chandler
Publication date
2018/5
Journal
The ISME journal
Volume
12
Issue
5
Pages
1263-1272
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Many Proteobacteria use quorum sensing to regulate production of public goods, such as antimicrobials and proteases, that are shared among members of a community. Public goods are vulnerable to exploitation by cheaters, such as quorum sensing-defective mutants. Quorum sensing- regulated private goods, goods that benefit only producing cells, can prevent the emergence of cheaters under certain growth conditions. Previously, we developed a laboratory co-culture model to investigate the importance of quorum-regulated antimicrobials during interspecies competition. In our model, Burkholderia thailandensis and Chromobacterium violaceum each use quorum sensing-controlled antimicrobials to inhibit the other species’ growth. Here, we show that C. violaceum uses quorum sensing to increase resistance to bactobolin, a B. thailandensis antibiotic, by increasing transcription of a putative antibiotic …
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