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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 4835-4837, Vol . 186, No . 15 Vibrio cholerae Biofilms: Stuck between a Rock and a Hard PlaceDepartment of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106
EPS synthesis is encoded by the Vibrio polysaccharide (vps) genes (17) . vps expression can be modulated through the quorum-sensing signaling cascade via the LuxR homologue, HapR, which represses vps expression and virulence factor formation (2, 11, 18) . Therefore, hapR mutants are rugose (4), leading to thicker biofilms and enhanced production of virulence factors (e.g., cholera toxin) (8, 19) . The biological consequence of quorum-sensing regulation of vps expression is that high cell density appears to promote the cessation of biofilms, perhaps reflecting an upper limit on the number of resident organisms due to spatial constraints within the mature biofilm . In contrast to the quorum-sensing pathway, the flagellum-dependent pathway of EPS synthesis shows an inverse relationship between EPS expression and virulence factor production, as nonflagellated cells are rugose, producing high levels of EPS that are associated with low levels of cholera toxin and infectivity (6) . Moreover, genetic analysis indicates that high-level EPS production, rather than the loss of flagella, is responsible for the virulence attenuation in nonflagellated cells . Last, the control of vps expression and biofilm formation by the flagellum- and phase variation-dependent pathways are linked by the action of transcriptional response regulators, VpsR and VpsT (1, 6, 16), which activate their own as well as each other's expression (1) . Maintaining multiple, overlapping signaling pathways for EPS synthesis and biofilm formation may contribute to persistence in the dynamic aquatic environments that occur between seasonal cholera outbreaks . In addition to bestowing upon bacteria the flexibility to persist in varied microenvironments, the maintenance of multiple EPS signaling pathways allows the opportunity for distinct strains to be selected in which the expression of certain pathways are favored or operational depending on the specific environmental history of the pathogen . This leads to the following question: are V . cholerae strains genetically competent to utilize the three EPS signaling pathways, or have genetic variants that are adapted to specific environmental challenges arisen? The answer appears to be a combination of these genetic possibilities, as some V . cholerae strains utilize both the HapR- and flagellum-dependent pathways, whereas other strains favor one pathway over the other (6); yet other strains fail to utilize either (e.g., spontaneous phase variants appear to arise via a HapR- and flagellum-independent mechanism) (3, 6, 16) . Thus, strains collected from clinically and environmentally relevant sources are heterogeneous with regard to their ability to signal EPS synthesis and biofilm formation and may reflect the specific microenvironments encountered by given strains during their life cycle . Does EPS signaling-based heterogeneity also occur within the population of cells that comprise the microenvironments within a single biofilm, and if so, does such heterogeneity contribute to the formation and/or maintenance of the three-dimensional biofilm architecture? The answers to these questions remain unclear .
As mentioned above, V . cholerae nonflagellated (flaA) mutants are rugose and are associated with elevated levels of EPS production and biofilm formation (14) . The initial favored hypothesis for these observations was that the lack of a complete flagellum was responsible for the elevated levels of EPS expression and the rugose phenotype . This hypothesis has been refined further since mutations in the sodium-driven flagellar motor genes (e.g., motX), alone and in combination with fla mutations (motX fla), result in low levels of vps transcription and biofilm formation as well as a smooth colony phenotype (6) . This suggests that the flagellar motor, rather than the lack of motility or flagella, participates in the transduction of the EPS-inducing signal in addition to functioning in flagellar rotation . Further, it appears that the flagellar motor dependence is functional rather than structural, as the addition of phenamil, a specific sodium motor poison, resulted in reduced vps transcription and biofilm formation in wild-type and in nonflagellated cells (6) . An alternative explanation for these data is that phenamil disrupts the sodium influx through the motor channel, which may have structural implications for the signaling mechanism . However, this does not affect the conceptual interpretation that the EPS-inducing signal is transduced through the flagellar motor, perhaps via mechanosensing of flagellar rotation, wherein a reduction in flagellar rotation may signal high levels of EPS synthesis and biofilm formation (6) . Consistent with this hypothesis, it has recently been reported that the progression from the planktonic stage to the monolayer stage may occur with the concomitant appearance of a subpopulation of either nonflagellated (wild-type) cells or cells that lack an active flagellum (9) . The selection for nonflagellated cells during the transition to the monolayer stage could occur because active flagella may break or hinder permanent attachment and immobilization of the organisms to a solid surface by alternate adhesins (9) . Mechanosensing of flagellar rotation through a sodium-driven flagellar motor has been proposed previously for the induction of lateral flagellar transcription in Vibrio parahaemolyticus (5) . Thus, the function of the flagellar motor as a mechanosensor of flagellar rotation may be shared among Vibrio spp . and perhaps selected to facilitate bacterial growth on solid surfaces (6) . This raises the possibility that the proposed mechanosensor mechanism has been co-opted as a general bacterial mechanism to induce appropriate behaviors in a wide range of microenvironments . How does a membrane-associated organelle (the flagellar motor) sense the presence or absence of an extracellular appendage (the flagellum) and transduce that information to an intracellular signaling cascade resulting in EPS synthesis? This question was solved in part by showing that activation of the vps genes through the transcriptional activator, VpsR, required the presence of MotX, suggesting that MotX was epistatic to VpsR in the EPS signaling pathway (6) . As expected, constitutive activation of VpsR precluded the dependence of EPS signaling through the flagellar motor (6) . However, a direct interaction between the transcriptional activator, VspR or VspT, and the vps structural genes has not been demonstrated (1, 6) . Curiously, both VspR and VspT are homologous to response regulators of two-component regulatory systems that are typically associated with sensory histidine kinases, yet no cognate sensor kinases have been identified (1, 6) . Future studies regarding the environmental signals and regulatory functions that govern EPS signaling will be central to understanding the molecular basis of bacterial adaptation and persistence . The presence of multiple EPS signaling pathways that function in discrete microenvironments confers upon V . cholerae the unique ability to persist in aquatic reservoirs during the long periods between seasonal outbreaks in areas of endemicity . Such persistence may be driven by a sodium flagellar motor-based mechanosensor mechanism through which a reduction in flagellar rotation leads to EPS synthesis and biofilm formation via the VpsR/VpsT signaling cascade (Fig . 1) . Once conditions become unfavorable for maintenance of the mature biofilm, flagellar rotation can be restored, allowing escape; the free-swimming pathogen can relocate and initiate a nascent biofilm and/or manifest itself as the source of a new cholera outbreak .
The views expressed in this Commentary do not necessarily reflect the views of the journal or of ASM.
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