4.6 Article

Two Pathway-Specific Transcriptional Regulators, PltR and PltZ, Coordinate Autoinduction of Pyoluteorin in Pseudomonas protegens Pf-5

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9071489

Keywords

autoinduction; pyoluteorin; transporter; regulation; Pseudomonas protegens

Categories

Funding

  1. National Research Initiative Competitive Grant from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2011-6701930192]
  2. Department of Plant Sciences and Plant Pathology at Montana State University

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Microorganisms regulate antibiotic biosynthesis through autoinduction, where PltR and PltZ act together to coordinate the autoinduction of pyoluteorin.
Antibiotic biosynthesis by microorganisms is commonly regulated through autoinduction, which allows producers to quickly amplify the production of antibiotics in response to environmental cues. Antibiotic autoinduction generally involves one pathway-specific transcriptional regulator that perceives an antibiotic as a signal and then directly stimulates transcription of the antibiotic biosynthesis genes. Pyoluteorin is an autoregulated antibiotic produced by some Pseudomonas spp. including the soil bacterium Pseudomonas protegens Pf-5. In this study, we show that PltR, a known pathway-specific transcriptional activator of pyoluteorin biosynthesis genes, is necessary but not sufficient for pyoluteorin autoinduction in Pf-5. We found that pyoluteorin is perceived as an inducer by PltZ, a second pathway-specific transcriptional regulator that directly represses the expression of genes encoding a transporter in the pyoluteorin gene cluster. Mutation of pltZ abolished the autoinducing effect of pyoluteorin on the transcription of pyoluteorin biosynthesis genes. Overall, our results support an alternative mechanism of antibiotic autoinduction by which the two pathway-specific transcriptional regulators PltR and PltZ coordinate the autoinduction of pyoluteorin in Pf-5. Possible mechanisms by which PltR and PltZ mediate the autoinduction of pyoluteorin are discussed.

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