Quorum Sensing Signals Alter in vitro Soil Virus Abundance and Bacterial Community Composition

Xiaolong Liang, Regan E. Wagner, Bingxue Li, Ning Zhang, Mark Radosevich

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Cell-density dependent quorum sensing (QS) is fundamental for many coordinated behaviors among bacteria. Most recently several studies have revealed a role for bacterial QS communication in bacteriophage (phage) reproductive decisions. However, QS based phage-host interactions remain largely unknown, with the mechanistic details revealed for only a few phage-host pairs and a dearth of information available at the microbial community level. Here we report on the specific action of eight different individual QS signals (acyl-homoserine lactones; AHLs varying in acyl-chain length from four to 14 carbon atoms) on prophage induction in soil microbial communities. We show QS autoinducers, triggered prophage induction in soil bacteria and the response was significant enough to alter bacterial community composition in vitro. AHL treatment significantly decreased the bacterial diversity (Shannon Index) but did not significantly impact species richness. Exposure to short chain-length AHLs resulted in a decrease in the abundance of different taxa than exposure to higher molecular weight AHLs. Each AHL targeted a different subset of bacterial taxa. Our observations indicate that individual AHLs may trigger prophage induction in different bacterial taxa leading to changes in microbial community structure. The findings also have implications for the role of phage-host interactions in ecologically significant processes such as biogeochemical cycles, and phage mediated transfer of host genes, e.g., photosynthesis and heavy metal/antibiotic resistance.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1287
JournalFrontiers in Microbiology
Volume11
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 10 2020
Externally publishedYes

Funding

This manuscript has been released as a pre-print at bioRxiv (Liang et al., 2019a). The authors acknowledge the constructive comments provided by the reviewers that were very helpful in improving the manuscript. Funding. This work was supported by a United States Department of Agriculture grant to MR (award number: 2018-67019-27792).

Keywords

  • community
  • diversity
  • induction
  • prophage
  • quorum sensing
  • soil

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