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Quorum Quenching Enzyme APTM01, an Acylhomoserine-Lactone Acylase from Marine Bacterium of Pseudoalteromonas tetraodonis Strain MQS005

Journal

CURRENT MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 76, Issue 12, Pages 1387-1397

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00284-019-01739-z

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Funding

  1. Guangdong Science and Technology Department [2013B030800001]
  2. Shenzhen Science and Technology Project [JCYJ20140509174140691, JCYJ20140417113430641]
  3. CAS Adjunct Professorship [2013T1G0038, GJHS2014090100463583]

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Quorum sensing is a system of stimuli and response correlated to population density and involves in pathogen infection, colonization, and pathogenesis. Quorum quenching enzymes as quorum sensing inhibitors have been identified in a number of bacteria and been used to control by triggering the pathogenic phenotype. The marine bacteria of Pseudoalteromonas had wide activity of degrading AHLs as a type of signal molecule associated with quorum sensing. We screened many Pseudoalteromonas strains in large scale to explore genes of quorum quenching enzymes from the China seas by whole-genome sequencing rather than genomic library construction. Nine target strains were obtained and an acylases gene APTM01 from the strain MQS005 belonging to PvdQ type on sub-branch in phylogenetic tree. And the heterogenous host containing the vector with target gene could degrade C10-HSL, C12-HSL and OC12-HSL. The obtained AHL acylase gene would be a candidate quorum quenching gene to apply in some fields. We identified that the strains of Pseudoalteromonas have wide AHL-degrading ability depending on quorum quenching. The strains would be a resource to explore new quorum quenching enzymes.

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