4.5 Article

Cannibalism enhances biofilm development in Bacillus subtilis

Journal

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 74, Issue 3, Pages 609-618

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2009.06882.x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. BASF Advance Research Initiative at Harvard (BARI)
  2. NIH [GM58213, GM18568]
  3. Fundacion Seneca, Comunidad Autonoma de la Region de Murcia (Spain)

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P>Cannibalism is a mechanism to delay sporulation in Bacillus subtilis. Cannibal cells express the skf and sdp toxin systems to lyse a fraction of their sensitive siblings. The lysed cells release nutrients that serve to feed the community, effectively delaying spore formation. Here we provide evidence that the subpopulation of cells that differentiates into cannibals is the same subpopulation that produces the extracellular matrix that holds cells together in biofilms. Cannibalism and matrix formation are both triggered in response to the signalling molecule surfactin. Nutrients released by the cannibalized cells are preferentially used by matrix-producing cells, as they are the only cells expressing resistance to the Skf and Sdp toxins. As a result this subpopulation increases in number and matrix production is enhanced when cannibalism toxins are produced. The cannibal/matrix-producing subpopulation is also generated in response to antimicrobials produced by other microorganisms and may thus constitute a defense mechanism to protect B. subtilis from the action of antibiotics in natural settings.

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