Socially mediated induction and suppression of antibiosis during bacterial coexistence

被引:162
作者
Abrudan, Monica I. [1 ,2 ]
Smakman, Fokko [1 ]
Grimbergen, Ard Jan [1 ,3 ]
Westhoff, Sanne [1 ]
Miller, Eric L. [1 ,2 ]
van Wezel, Gilles P. [1 ,4 ]
Rozen, Daniel E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Leiden Univ, Inst Biol, NL-2333 BE Leiden, Netherlands
[2] Univ Manchester, Fac Life Sci, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England
[3] Univ Groningen, Fac Math & Nat Sci, NL-9747 AG Groningen, Netherlands
[4] Netherlands Inst Ecol NIOO KNAW, Microbial Ecol, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
microbial ecology; Streptomyces; sociomicrobiology; antibiotics; competition sensing; COMPETITION; STRESS; SIGNAL; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.1504076112
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Despite their importance for humans, there is little consensus on the function of antibiotics in nature for the bacteria that produce them. Classical explanations suggest that bacteria use antibiotics as weapons to kill or inhibit competitors, whereas a recent alternative hypothesis states that antibiotics are signals that coordinate cooperative social interactions between coexisting bacteria. Here we distinguish these hypotheses in the prolific antibiotic-producing genus Streptomyces and provide strong evidence that antibiotics are weapons whose expression is significantly influenced by social and competitive interactions between competing strains. We show that cells induce facultative responses to cues produced by competitors by (i) increasing their own antibiotic production, thereby decreasing costs associated with constitutive synthesis of these expensive products, and (ii) by suppressing antibiotic production in competitors, thereby reducing direct threats to themselves. These results thus show that although antibiotic production is profoundly social, it is emphatically not cooperative. Using computer simulations, we next show that these facultative strategies can facilitate the maintenance of biodiversity in a community context by converting lethal interactions between neighboring colonies to neutral interactions where neither strain excludes the other. Thus, just as bacteriocins can lead to increased diversity via rock-paper-scissors dynamics, so too can antibiotics via elicitation and suppression. Our results reveal that social interactions are crucial for understanding antibiosis and bacterial community dynamics, and highlight the potential of interbacterial interactions for novel drug discovery by eliciting pathways that mediate interference competition.
引用
收藏
页码:11054 / 11059
页数:6
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