Bacteria were for a long time believed to exist as individual cells that sought primarily to find nutrients and multiply. The discovery of intercellular communication among bacteria has led to the realization that bacteria are capable of coordinated activity that was once believed to be restricted to multicellular organisms. The capacity to behave collectively as a group has obvious advantages, for example, the ability to migrate to a more suitable environment/better nutrient supply and to adopt new modes of growth, such as sporulation or biofilm formation, which may afford protection from deleterious environments. The “language” used for this intercellular communication is based on small, self-generated signal molecules called autoinducers. Through the use of autoinducers, bacteria can regulate their behavior according to population density. The phenomenon of quorum sensing, or cell-to-cell communication, relies on the principle that when a single bacterium releases autoinducers (AIs) into the environment, their concentration is too low to be detected. However, when sufficient bacteria are present, autoinducer concentrations reach a threshold level that allows the bacteria to sense a critical cell mass and, in response, to activate or repress target genes. Most of the bacteria thus far identified that utilize quorum-sensing systems are associated in some way with plants or animals. The nature of these relationships can be either amicable, as characterized by symbiotic bacteria, or adversarial, as seen with pathogenic bacteria. There are numerous bacteria that have components of a quorum-sensing system for which the phenotype regulated remains an enigma. Similarly, there are bacteria known to regulate a specific phenotype via quorum sensing for which one or more of the regulatory components have thus far eluded identification. In this review we give examples of pathogenic relationships, focusing on organisms for which many of the facets of their quorum-sensing systems have been elucidated.
QUORUM SENSING IN GRAM-NEGATIVE BACTERIA
The vast majority of gram-negative quorum-sensing systems that have been studied thus far utilize
N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHL) as signaling molecules. When in high enough concentration, these molecules can bind to and activate a transcriptional activator, or R protein, which in turn induces expression of target genes (Fig.
1). The use of biosensors to screen spent culture supernatants has led to the discovery that AHLs are produced by a plethora of unrelated bacteria (Table
1). Biosensors typically consist of a quorum-sensing-controlled promoter fused to a reporter such as
lacZ or the
lux operon. These biosensor strains contain a functional R protein but lack the AHL synthase enzyme; therefore, promoter activity depends on the presence of exogenous AHL. Despite the fact that R proteins are exquisitely sensitive to their cognate AHLs, some infidelity does exist and this infidelity enables R proteins to be responsive to a range of AHL molecules, albeit higher concentrations of noncognate AHL are usually required for activation. To date, AHL molecules have been identified containing 4- to 14-carbon acyl side chains and either an oxo, a hydroxy, or no substitution at the third carbon. Only two AHLs bearing double bonds have been identified: 7,8-
cis-N-(3-hydroxytetradecenoyl)homoserine lactone from
Rhizobium leguminosarum (
47,
105) and 7,8-
cis-N-(tetradecenoyl)homoserine lactone from
Rhodobacter sphaerhoides (
92).
It is becoming apparent that in addition to AHLs, alternative gram-negative signaling molecules do exist. For example, the plant pathogen
Ralstonia solanacearum produces 3-hydroxypalmitic acid methyl ester as a novel signaling molecule which, together with AHLs, is used to regulate virulence (
34).
Xanthomonas campestris pv.
campestris, a cabbage pathogen, produces a diffusible extracellular factor (DSF) which has yet to be chemically characterized but is not an AHL (
5). In
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a third autoinducer, designated PQS (
Pseudomonas quinolone signal), was identified that is distinct from the other two AHL autoinducers produced by this organism in that it is a 2-heptyl-3-hydroxy-4-quinolone (
82). Butyrolactones have been isolated from
Pseudomonas aureofaciens culture supernatants (
41), and recently, a novel family of signaling compounds, identified as diketopiperazines (DKPs), were discovered in cell-free supernatants of
P. aeruginosa,
Pseudomonas fluorescens,
Pseudomonas alcaligenes,
Enterobacter agglomerans, and
Citrobacter freundii (
49). Although these molecules were capable of only weakly activating a number of LuxR-based biosensors, some of the DKPs were able to act antagonistically to reduce
N-3-(oxohexanoyl)homoserine lactone (3-oxo-C
6-HSL)-mediated bioluminescence, suggesting that they may be able to compete for LuxR binding. In nature, DKPs have been isolated from a wide range of sources and have been shown to have pharmacological effects in various mammals, including humans (
91); however, the precise role played by DKPs in bacterial cell-to-cell signaling has yet to be established.
PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA
With regard to bacteria that utilize quorum sensing as part of their pathogenic lifestyle,
P. aeruginosa is perhaps the best understood in terms of the virulence factors regulated and the role quorum sensing plays in pathogenicity. Classified as an opportunistic pathogen,
P. aeruginosa primarily infects individuals who are immunocompromised, such as patients with cancer or AIDS (
33,
68) or those having breaches in normal barriers caused by burns, indwelling medical devices, or prolonged use of broad-spectrum antibiotics (
11,
23).
P. aeruginosa has an impressive armament of both cell-associated and extracellular virulence factors. Expression of many of the extracellular factors is not constitutive but rather cell-density dependent with maximum protease production occurring during the late logarithmic and early stationary phases of growth (
123,
124). The genetic basis for this growth-phase regulation was uncovered with the discovery that
P. aeruginosa contains genes, called
lasR and
lasI, with significant homology to the
luxR and
luxI genes of
Vibrio fischeri (
42,
76). In
V. fischeri,
luxR and
luxI are involved in the cell-density-dependent regulation of light production (
30,
109). The
luxR gene encodes a transcriptional activator of the bioluminescence operon, and
luxI codes for an autoinducer synthase that directs the synthesis of the autoinducer 3-oxo-C
6-HSL (
26). Upon binding 3-oxo-C
6-HSL, the LuxR protein becomes activated, enabling it to induce transcription of the
lux operon. Since the discovery of the
lux quorum-sensing system, a number of gram-negative bacteria, including
P. aeruginosa, have been found to produce LuxR- and LuxI-type proteins (for reviews, see references
39 and
40).
In
P. aeruginosa, the transcriptional activator LasR functions in conjunction with its cognate AHL,
N-(3-oxododecanoyl)-
l-homoserine lactone (3-oxo-C
12-HSL), synthesized by the LasI autoinducer synthase (
76,
78). LasR–3-oxo-C
12-HSL regulates expression of a number of
P. aeruginosa virulence genes including
lasB,
lasA,
aprA, and
toxA (
42,
43,
78,
121) as well as
lasIitself, creating an autoinduction feedback loop (
106) (Fig.
2). An additional gene,
rsaL, is under the regulatory control of LasR–3-oxo-C
12-HSL, the product of which negatively regulates
P. aeruginosa quorum sensing by inhibiting
lasI expression (
20).
The discovery of a second signaling system revealed that quorum sensing in
P. aeruginosa is more complex than originally believed (
12,
73,
74,
126). The
rhl quorum-sensing system consists of the transcriptional activator RhlR and the autoinducer synthase RhlI which directs the synthesis of
N-butyryl-
l-homoserine lactone (C
4-HSL) (
79). The RhlR–C
4-HSL complex regulates expression of
rhlAB, required for rhamnolipid production,
lasB,
aprA, the stationary-phase sigma factor RpoS, and production of the secondary metabolites pyocyanin and cyanide (
12,
60,
61,
73,
79,
126).
With the finding that
P. aeruginosa has two separate quorum-sensing circuits came the question of whether the two were capable of interaction. In spite of the predicted structural similarities between LasR and RhlR and the similarities between the two AHLs, there is little interchangeability between the two systems. The R-proteins are not significantly activated by their noncognate AHLs; LasR is not activated by C
4-HSL and 3-oxo-C
12-HSL is capable of only low-level RhlR activation (
80). Thus it appears that the R proteins show high specificity with regard to the AHL required for their activation. Similarly, genes that are primarily activated by one system are only minimally activated by the other (
80), indicating that specific recognition sequences must be present in the operator regions of these target genes that dictate which quorum-sensing system is required for induction. Despite the high fidelity of these systems for their regulatory components and gene targets, a link between the two systems does exist. The
las system positively regulates expression of both
rhlR and
rhlI (
60,
83) (Fig.
2). Furthermore, 3-oxo-C
12-HSL is able to compete with C
4-HSL for RhlR binding, indicating that 3-oxo-C
12-HSL is able to act as an antagonist of the
rhl system (
83). Thus, it appears that in
P. aeruginosa, quorum sensing is arranged in a hierarchical fashion with the
las system being the dominant regulator.
In addition to 3-oxo-C
12-HSL and C
4-HSL, which are the major AHLs produced by
P. aeruginosa grown in the laboratory, minor AHL products can also be detected (
78). A complete description of the AHL biosynthetic pathways is beyond the scope of this review (for a review, see reference
37); however, the autoinducer synthase molecules examined to date have been found to use
S-adenosylmethionine and the appropriate fatty acid conjugated to acyl carrier protein (ACL) as substrates. In
P. aeruginosa, in vitro studies of AHL synthesis have revealed that the majority, if not all, of the 3-oxo-HSLs found in culture supernatants are synthesized by LasI (H. Schweizer, personal communication). Furthermore, when one of the enzymatic steps of the fatty acid biosynthetic pathway becomes rate limiting, 3-oxo-C
12-HSL is no longer produced at detectable levels; instead, the shorter-chain-length HSLs 3-oxo-C
10-HSL, 3-oxo-C
8-HSL and 3-oxo-C
6-HSL are preferentially generated (H. Schweizer, personal communication). These findings indicate that the acyl chain lengths of the HSL products are at least in part regulated by the availability of the 3-oxo-acyl-ACP substrate precursors.
To date, the biological function of these noncognate AHLs remains an enigma. One possible role for these minor AHL molecules is to activate additional LuxR-type proteins. In
P. aeruginosa, two genes encoding proteins with significant homology to LasR and RhlR have been identified; however, at this time it is unclear whether the minor signal molecules present in
P. aeruginosa culture supernatants can activate either of these R proteins. A second possible role for noncognate AHLs arises from the fact that these molecules can frequently activate a given R protein, albeit at lower induction levels than for the cognate AHL. In this manner, minor AHLs may function as competitive inhibitors of autoinduction. An example of this is seen in
P. aeruginosa where the
las signal molecule 3-oxo-C
12-HSL can efficiently compete with C
4-HSL for RhlR binding (
83). Similarly in
V. fischeri, a second AHL synthase, AinS, directs the synthesis of
N-octanoyl-
l-HSL (C
8-HSL) (
59). Despite the fact that C
8-HSL can activate LuxR to some degree, it appears that this molecule functions as a competitive inhibitor of
V. fischeri bioluminescence. In
ainS mutants, induction of bioluminescence occurs at a lower cell density than in the parental strain (
59). Furthermore, addition of C
8-HSL to cultures of either the wild-type strain or
ainS mutants results in delayed onset of bioluminescence (
59). Thus, in both
P. aeruginosa and
V. fischeri, the inhibitory effect of noncognate AHLs may represent a means of “fine tuning” these quorum-sensing systems to precisely control expression of target genes.
Recently, a third autoinducer molecule was identified in
P. aeruginosa (
82). This molecule is structurally very different from the other two
P. aeruginosa autoinducers in that it is a 2-heptyl-3-hydroxy-4-quinolone, designated PQS. Preliminary studies have revealed that PQS is involved in
lasB expression and that although expression of PQS is under control of the
las system, RhlR is required for PQS activity. At present, many aspects of PQS have yet to be uncovered, including the role it plays in
P. aeruginosa quorum sensing and virulence and the R protein with which it reacts. The structural similarity between PQS and antimicrobial quinolones is quite intriguing, although preliminary studies have not shown any antimicrobial activity associated with PQS (
82). The discovery of PQS reveals yet another layer in the increasingly complex system used by this organism to maintain tight control of its virulence factors. This tight regulation is a common theme in
P. aeruginosa quorum sensing, evidenced by the fact that the
xcp genes involved in type II secretion are under control of both the
las and
rhl quorum-sensing systems (
14). This pathway is utilized in secretion of quorum-sensing controlled enzymes, such as elastase and proteases, indicating that
P. aeruginosa is extremely vigilant about regulating these factors at both the levels of production and export.
P. aeruginosa is intrinsically resistant to numerous antimicrobial agents, including antibiotics, organic solvents, and detergents. Low outer membrane permeability together with the presence of multidrug efflux pumps that export a wide range of antimicrobial agents is thought to contribute to this intrinsic resistance. Three well-studied
P. aeruginosa pumps have been described: MexAB-OprM, MexCD-OprJ, and MexEF-OprN encoded by the
mexAB-oprM,
mexCD-oprJ, and
mexEF-oprNoperons, respectively (
58,
89,
90). During a study to investigate whether AIs freely diffuse in and out of
P. aeruginosa cells, it was discovered that in addition to its slow diffusion, 3-oxo-C
12-HSL is actively pumped from cells by the MexAB-OprM pump (
81). In contrast, C
4-HSL diffuses rapidly across the cell membranes and is not actively transported (
81). Presumably, the difference in the length of the acyl chains accounts for the differences in cellular accumulation of the two AIs, with the more hydrophobic 3-oxo-C
12-HSL partitioning into the cytoplasmic membrane, thereby facilitating its export by the MexAB-OprM pump. These findings are intriguing because they suggest that antimicrobial therapy designed to interfere with MexAB-OprM drug efflux will also affect
las-controlled gene expression. In cells lacking a functional MexAB-OprM pump, a higher accumulation of 3-oxo-C
12-HSL would be expected to occur sooner, which should result in earlier expression of target genes. It has been theorized that bacteria employ quorum sensing for regulation of virulence to ensure that toxic immune response-activating factors are elicited only after a sufficient number of bacteria have been amassed to overwhelm host defenses. If the bacteria are forced to prematurely produce virulence factors, the host may recognize the invading bacteria sooner and eradicate the infection. Thus, antimicrobial strategies designed to disarm efflux pumps and increase the antibiotic susceptibility of
P. aeruginosa may prove even more effective if they cause premature expression of virulence products.
Quorum sensing in
P. aeruginosa is involved in regulating expression of a number of virulence factors, and as such, this regulation is believed to play an important role in the pathogenicity of this organism. Using a number of different animal models, this presumption has been confirmed. In the neonatal mouse model of pneumonia, a
lasR-deficient strain of
P. aeruginosa was found to have significantly decreased virulence compared to that in the parent (
117). Analysis of a
lasI mutant, a
rhlI mutant, and a
lasI rhlI double mutant in the same model revealed markedly decreased virulence, with the most notable reduction seen in the double I mutant (
77). In a burned mouse model, strains deficient in
lasR,
lasI,
rhlI, or both
lasI and
rhlI were found to be less virulent in vivo than in the parental strain (
101,
102). In addition, the total number of bacteria recovered from the spleens, livers, and skin of mice infected with the different mutants were significantly lower than those for the parent strain (
102). These findings indicate that quorum sensing plays an important role in the dissemination of
P. aeruginosa throughout the body of burned mice. In the double I mutant, which was the least virulent strain, complementation with
lasI,
rhlI, or both
lasI and
rhlI on multicopy plasmid significantly increased both in vivo virulence and the ability to spread within the burned skin of the infected animals (
102).
In a study employing three different models of infection, namely
Caenorhabditis elegans (nematode),
Arabidopsis thaliana (plant), and a burned mouse model, a
lasR-deficient mutant generated through random mutagenesis exhibited greatly reduced virulence in all three models (
116). Intriguingly, a
gacA mutant and a
toxA mutant also exhibited decreased virulence in the three models (
93,
94,
116). GacA is a global activator in
P. aeruginosa that has previously been shown to regulate expression of
lasR and
rhlR and production of the
rhl AHL, C
4-HSL (
97);
toxAencodes exotoxin A, which is regulated by the
lasquorum-sensing system (
43). These studies are extremely exciting because they suggest that the three aforementioned genes, which are all linked to quorum sensing, contribute to the trans-kindom virulence of
P. aeruginosa. Moreover, using the less costly and simpler plant or nematode model of infection enables identification of genes required for infection of other species. In the future, it will be intriguing to see if other bacteria that infect multiple species. In the future, it will be intriguing to see if other bacteria that infect multiple species and employ quorum sensing as part of their pathogenic lifestyles have genes that contribute to virulence in such diverse hosts.
In a study designed to assess the role of
P. aeruginosaquorum sensing in human infections, sputum samples from the lungs of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients infected with
P. aeruginosawere assayed for
lasR,
lasA,
lasB, and
toxA expression (
111). A correlation was observed between
lasA,
lasB, and
toxAtranscript accumulation, suggesting coordinated regulation of these genes. Moreover, accumulation of the
lasR transcript correlated with that of the other genes; thus, it appears that LasR–3-oxo-C
12-HSL actively regulates gene expression during chronic lung infection.
AGROBACTERIUM TUMEFACIENS
A. tumefaciens is a pathogen that is capable of causing crown gall tumors in plants through the transfer of oncogenic DNA from its tumor-inducing Ti plasmid to the nuclei of the plant. In addition to the
vir genes required for plant transformation, the Ti plasmids also contain a complete set of
tra genes that facilitate interbacterial transfer of the Ti plasmid (
2,
32). Conjugation in
A. tumefaciens is actually regulated by two different signaling mechanisms; one is plant based and the other is bacterium associated. The plant-produced signal regulating expression of the
tra genes is a conjugal opine that is produced by crown gall tumors. Opines act as a nutrient source for the infecting bacteria, and production of these compounds is under direction of the Ti-plasmid, as are the enzymes necessary for the import and catabolism of these compounds by the bacteria. The two types of Ti plasmids present in
A. tumefaciens differ with respect to the opine that acts as the conjugal signal. Nopaline-type Ti plasmids are induced by agrocinopines A and B (
29), whereas conjugation of octopine-type Ti plasmids is induced by octopine (
56). The discovery that
A. tumefaciens produces a diffusible compound that dramatically stimulates plasmid conjugation (
129) together with the identification of a regulator, called TraR, capable of activating expression of the
tragenes (
87) suggested that conjugal transfer in
A. tumefaciens is regulated by a quorum-sensing system. The bacterial compound that stimulated conjugation was identified to be 3-oxo-C
8-HSL (
130) which is synthesized by the autoinducer synthase TraI (
51). TraR–3-oxo-C
8-HSL regulates expression of the
tra regulon as well as the
traI gene itself, thereby creating a positive feedback loop (
2,
32,
51,
87). An additional gene,
traM, positively regulated by TraR–3-oxo-HSL was found to play a role in
A. tumefaciensquorum sensing (
50). Overexpression of
traM on a multicopy plasmid in the presence of wild-type levels of TraR abolished
tra gene expression. However, upon overexpression of TraR,
tra gene expression was restored, suggesting that TraM may interact stoichiometrically with TraR to act as an antagonist of the
tra regulon.
The
A. tumefaciens opine and quorum-sensing signal pathways are linked to one another in a hierarchical fashion, with opines being the dominant regulator. For TraR–3-oxo-C
8-HSL signaling to occur, the appropriate opine must be present. In the octopine-type Ti plasmids, this control is mediated by placing the
traR gene under regulatory control of an octopine-responsive activator, called OccR (
38). It is only when sufficient octopine is present that OccR induces transcription of
traR. After the cell density has increased to the point where sufficient 3-oxo-C
8-HSL has accumulated to activate TraR, the
tra operon is expressed. In the case of the nopaline-type Ti plasmids, the
traR gene is also regulated by opines but through a different mechanism. Agrocinopines A and B induce expression of the
traR gene; while a mutation in
accR, which is believed to encode a repressor, causes constitutive
tragene expression (
10). These findings have led to the proposal that AccR directly represses
traR expression and that the agrocinopines can act as antagonists of this repression (
125).