4.7 Article

Competition Sensing Changes Antibiotic Production in Streptomyces

Journal

MBIO
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.02729-20

Keywords

Streptomyces; antibiotic production; interference competition; microbial ecology; social microbiology

Categories

Funding

  1. Dutch National Science Foundation (NWO) [824.02.003, 731.014.206]

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Bacteria compete for resources and space by producing antibiotics that inhibit competitors, with antibiotic production influenced by social cues and resource limitation. Antibiotic production is more likely to be induced by cues from closely related strains or those sharing biosynthetic gene clusters, but not by competitors that inhibit growth. Cells often reduce antibiotic production in the presence of competitors, especially under nutrient limitation, highlighting the regulation of antibiotic production by interactions between social and resource environments.
One of the most important ways that bacteria compete for resources and space is by producing antibiotics that inhibit competitors. Because antibiotic production is costly, the biosynthetic gene clusters coordinating their synthesis are under strict regulatory control and often require elicitors to induce expression, including cues from competing strains. Although these cues are common, they are not produced by all competitors, and so the phenotypes causing induction remain unknown. By studying interactions between 24 antibiotic-producing strains of streptomycetes, we show that strains commonly inhibit each other's growth and that this occurs more frequently if strains are closely related. Next, we show that antibiotic production is more likely to be induced by cues from strains that are closely related or that share secondary metabolite biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs). Unexpectedly, antibiotic production is less likely to be induced by competitors that inhibit the growth of a focal strain, indicating that cell damage is not a general cue for induction. In addition to induction, antibiotic production often decreases in the presence of a competitor, although this response was not associated with genetic relatedness or overlap in BGCs. Finally, we show that resource limitation increases the chance that antibiotic production declines during competition. Our results reveal the importance of social cues and resource availability in the dynamics of interference competition in streptomycetes. IMPORTANCE Bacteria secrete antibiotics to inhibit their competitors, but the presence of competitors can determine whether these toxins are produced. Here, we study the role of the competitive and resource environment on antibiotic production in Streptomyces, bacteria renowned for their production of antibiotics. We show that Streptomyces cells are more likely to produce antibiotics when grown with competitors that are closely related or that share biosynthetic pathways for secondary metabolites, but not when they are threatened by competitor's toxins, in contrast to predictions of the competition sensing hypothesis. Streptomyces cells also often reduce their output of antibiotics when grown with competitors, especially under nutrient limitation. Our findings highlight that interactions between the social and resource environments strongly regulate antibiotic production in these medicinally important bacteria.

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