Publication:
Salmonella biofilm development depends on the phosphorylation status of RcsB

Consultable a partir de

Date

2012

Director

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión aceptada / Onetsi den bertsioa

Project identifier

MICINN//BIO2008-05284-C02-01/ES/
MICINN//BIO2010-18885/ES/

Abstract

The Rcs phosphorelay pathway is a complex signaling pathway involved in the regulation of many cell surface structures in enteric bacteria. In response to environmental stimuli, the sensor histidine kinase (RcsC) autophosphorylates and then transfers the phosphate through intermediary steps to the response regulator (RcsB), which, once phosphorylated, regulates gene expression. Here, we show that Salmonella biofilm development depends on the phosphorylation status of RcsB. Thus, unphosphorylated RcsB, hitherto assumed to be inactive, is essential to activate the expression of the biofilm matrix compounds. The prevention of RcsB phosphorylation either by the disruption of the phosphorelay at the RcsC or RcsD level or by the production of a nonphosphorylatable RcsB allele induces biofilm development. On the contrary, the phosphorylation of RcsB by the constitutive activation of the Rcs pathway inhibits biofilm development, an effect that can be counteracted by the introduction of a nonphosphorylatable RcsB allele. The inhibition of biofilm development by phosphorylated RcsB is due to the repression of CsgD expression, through a mechanism dependent on the accumulation of the small noncoding RNA RprA. Our results indicate that unphosphorylated RcsB plays an active role for integrating environmental signals and, more broadly, that RcsB phosphorylation acts as a key switch between planktonic and sessile life-styles in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium.

Keywords

Salmonella, Biofilm, RscCDB, CsgD, Unphosphorylated response regulator

Department

IdAB. Instituto de Agrobiotecnología / Agrobioteknologiako Institutua

Faculty/School

Degree

Doctorate program

Editor version

Funding entities

A.T.-A. and J.V. were supported by Ramón y Cajal contracts from the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, Spain. This research was supported by grants BIO2008-05284-C02-01 and BIO2010-18885 from the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación and IIM13329.RI1 from the Gobierno de Navarra (Spain).

© 2012, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.


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