Peptide antibiotic sensing and detoxification modules of Bacillus subtilis.
Staroń. Anna A; Finkeisen. Dora Elisabeth DE; Mascher. Thorsten T
Key Findings
- Bacillus subtilis has three separate two‑component systems plus ABC transporters that sense and detoxify different peptide antibiotics.
- The YxdJK‑LM system is specifically activated by the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37.
- Promoter regions of the BceA and PsdA genes can be repurposed as whole‑cell biosensors for high‑throughput screening.
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, this research doesn’t change how you would take or use LL‑37, but it highlights that bacteria can quickly neutralize it, which may affect its effectiveness as an antimicrobial. The identified promoter elements could eventually be used to develop cheap, bacterial‑based tests for detecting peptide antibiotics in research or quality‑control settings.
Summary
The study shows that the soil bacterium Bacillus subtilis can detect and pump out certain peptide antibiotics, including the human antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, using specific sensor‑transporter systems. It also points out that parts of these bacterial genes could be turned into simple “living sensors” for detecting such peptides in the lab.
Abstract
Peptide antibiotics are produced by a wide range of microorganisms. Most of them target the cell envelope, often by inhibiting cell wall synthesis. One of the resistance mechanisms against antimicrobial peptides is a detoxification module consisting of a two-component system and an ABC transporter. Upon the detection of such a compound, the two-component system induces the expression of the ABC transporter, which in turn removes the antibiotic from its site of action, mediating the resistance of the cell. Three such peptide antibiotic-sensing and detoxification modules are present in Bacillus subtilis. Here we show that each of these modules responds to a number of peptides and confers resistance against them. BceRS-BceAB (BceRS-AB) responds to bacitracin, plectasin, mersacidin, and actagardine. YxdJK-LM is induced by a cationic antimicrobial peptide, LL-37. The PsdRS-AB (formerly YvcPQ-RS) system responds primarily to lipid II-binding lantibiotics such as nisin and gallidermin. We characterized the psdRS-AB operon and defined the regulatory sequences within the P(psdA) promoter. Mutation analysis demonstrated that P(psdA) expression is fully PsdR dependent. The features of both the P(bceA) and P(psdA) promoters make them promising candidates as novel whole-cell biosensors that can easily be adjusted for high-throughput screening.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-11-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1128/aac.00352-10