Cell Reports | Vol.15, Issue.5 | 2017-05-23 | Pages
Independent Regulation of Type VI Secretion in Vibrio cholerae by TfoX and TfoY
Type VI secretion systems (T6SSs) are nanomachines used for interbacterial killing and intoxication of eukaryotes. Although Vibrio cholerae is a model organism for structural studies on T6SSs, the underlying regulatory network is less understood. A recent study showed that the T6SS is part of the natural competence regulon in V. cholerae and is activated by the regulator TfoX. Here, we identify the TfoX homolog TfoY as a second activator of the T6SS. Importantly, despite inducing the same T6SS core machinery, the overall regulons differ significantly for TfoX and TfoY. We show that TfoY does not contribute to competence induction. Instead, TfoY drives the production of T6SS-dependent and T6SS-independent toxins, together with an increased motility phenotype. Hence, we conclude that V. cholerae uses its sole T6SS in response to diverse cues and for distinctive outcomes: either to kill for the prey’s DNA, leading to horizontal gene transfer, or as part of a defensive escape reaction.
Original Text (This is the original text for your reference.)
Independent Regulation of Type VI Secretion in Vibrio cholerae by TfoX and TfoY
Type VI secretion systems (T6SSs) are nanomachines used for interbacterial killing and intoxication of eukaryotes. Although Vibrio cholerae is a model organism for structural studies on T6SSs, the underlying regulatory network is less understood. A recent study showed that the T6SS is part of the natural competence regulon in V. cholerae and is activated by the regulator TfoX. Here, we identify the TfoX homolog TfoY as a second activator of the T6SS. Importantly, despite inducing the same T6SS core machinery, the overall regulons differ significantly for TfoX and TfoY. We show that TfoY does not contribute to competence induction. Instead, TfoY drives the production of T6SS-dependent and T6SS-independent toxins, together with an increased motility phenotype. Hence, we conclude that V. cholerae uses its sole T6SS in response to diverse cues and for distinctive outcomes: either to kill for the prey’s DNA, leading to horizontal gene transfer, or as part of a defensive escape reaction.
+More
t6ss core tfox homolog tfoy vi secretion systems competence regulon preys dna t6ssindependent t6sss vibrio cholerae defensive escape reaction motility t6ssdependent interbacterial killing and intoxication of eukaryotes structural studies regulatory horizontal gene transfer
APA
MLA
Chicago
,.Independent Regulation of Type VI Secretion in Vibrio cholerae by TfoX and TfoY. 15 (5),.
Select your report category*
Reason*
New sign-in location:
Last sign-in location:
Last sign-in date: