4.8 Article

The Vibrio cholerae chitin utilization program

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0308707101

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [AI053706, R01 AI053706, AI43422] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM38759, GM51215, R01 GM038759, R01 GM051215] Funding Source: Medline

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Chitin, an insoluble polymer of GIcNAc, is an abundant source of carbon, nitrogen, and energy for marine microorganisms. Microarray expression profiling and mutational studies of Vibrio cholerae growing on a natural chitin surface, or with the soluble chitin oligosaccharides (GIcNAc)(2-6), GIcNAc, or the glucosamine dimer (GIcN)(2) identified three sets of differentially regulated genes. We show that (i) ChiS, a sensor histidine kinase, regulates expression of the (GIcNAc)(2-6) gene set, including a (GIcNAc)(2) catabolic operon, two extracellular chitinases, a chitoporin, and a PiIA-containing type IV pilus, designated ChiRP (chitin-regulated pilus) that confers a significant growth advantage to V. cholerae on a chitin surface; (ii) GIcNAc causes the coordinate expression of genes involved with chitin chemotaxis and adherence and with the transport and assimilation of GIcNAc; (iii) (GIcN)(2) induces genes required for the transport and catabolism of nonacetylated chitin residues; and (iv) the constitutively expressed MSHA pilus facilitates adhesion to the chitin surface independent of surface chemistry. Collectively, these results provide a global portrait of a complex, multistage V. cholerae program for the efficient utilization of chitin.

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