On the stage of bacterial signal transduction and regulation, bis-(3'-5')-cyclic dimeric guanosine monophosphate (c-di-GMP) has long played the part of Sleeping Beauty. c-di-GMP was first described in 1987, but only recently was it recognized that the enzymes that 'make and break' it are not only ubiquitous in the bacterial world, but are found in many species in huge numbers. As a key player in the decision between the motile planktonic and sedentary biofilm-associated bacterial 'lifestyles', c-di-GMP binds to an unprecedented range of effector components and controls diverse targets, including transcription, the activities of enzymes and larger cellular structures. This Review focuses on emerging principles of c-di-GMP signalling using selected systems in different bacteria as examples.
The S (or RpoS) subunit of RNA polymerase is the master regulator of the general stress response in Escherichia coli. While nearly absent in rapidly growing cells, S is strongly induced during entry into stationary phase and/or many other stress conditions and is essential for the expression of multiple stress resistances. Genome-wide expression profiling data presented here indicate that up to 10% of the E. coli genes are under direct or indirect control of S and that S should be considered a second vegetative sigma factor with a major impact not only on stress tolerance but on the entire cell physiology under nonoptimal growth conditions. This large data set allowed us to unequivocally identify a S consensus promoter in silico. Moreover, our results suggest that S -dependent genes represent a regulatory network with complex internal control (as exemplified by the acid resistance genes). This network also exhibits extensive regulatory overlaps with other global regulons (e.g., the cyclic AMP receptor protein regulon). In addition, the global regulatory protein Lrp was found to affect S and/or 70 selectivity of many promoters. These observations indicate that certain modules of the S -dependent general stress response can be temporarily recruited by stress-specific regulons, which are controlled by other stress-responsive regulators that act together with 70 RNA polymerase. Thus, not only the expression of genes within a regulatory network but also the architecture of the network itself can be subject to regulation.The general stress sigma factor S (or RpoS) is strongly induced when Escherichia coli cells are exposed to various stress conditions, which include starvation, hyperosmolarity, pH downshift, or nonoptimal high or low temperature (for a review of S regulation, see reference 24). By standard genetic and molecular biology methods, more than 80 S -controlled genes have been identified to date, indicating that S is the master regulator of a rather large regulon which represents the genetic basis of the E. coli general stress response (for summaries, see references 23 and 41).In their regulatory patterns, many S -controlled genes just follow the cellular S level; i.e., they are activated whenever S and therefore S -containing RNA polymerase (E S ) accumulate in the cell. Other S -dependent genes, however, exhibit highly specific regulation, with a narrow window of expression only under some sort of stress condition. The best-studied example of this type of S -controlled gene is the csiD gene, which is mainly induced by carbon starvation because the cyclic AMP (cAMP)-cAMP receptor protein (CRP) acts as an essential activator for S -containing RNA polymerase at the csiD promoter (21,46,49). Also, the leucine-responsive regulatory protein (Lrp) is involved in the regulation of certain S -dependent genes (9,13,33,64). These findings indicate that the S -containing RNA polymerase holoenzyme has the ability to cooperate with additional regulatory factors, just as the vegetative RNA polymerase containing 70 does. ...
S produces a fine-tuned checkpoint system that "unlocks" curli expression only after down-regulation of flagellar gene expression. In summary, these data reveal the logic and sequence of molecular events underlying the motile-to-adhesive "lifestyle" switch in E. coli.[Keywords: Adhesion; c-di-GMP; flagella; GGDEF; EAL; RpoS] Supplemental material is available at http://www.genesdev.org.
Morphological form in multicellular aggregates emerges from the interplay of genetic constitution and environmental signals. Bacterial macrocolony biofilms, which form intricate three-dimensional structures, such as large and often radially oriented ridges, concentric rings, and elaborate wrinkles, provide a unique opportunity to understand this interplay of "nature and nurture" in morphogenesis at the molecular level. Macrocolony morphology depends on self-produced extracellular matrix components. In Escherichia coli, these are stationary phase-induced amyloid curli fibers and cellulose. While the widely used "domesticated" E. coli K-12 laboratory strains are unable to generate cellulose, we could restore cellulose production and macrocolony morphology of E. coli K-12 strain W3110 by "repairing" a single chromosomal SNP in the bcs operon. Using scanning electron and fluorescence microscopy, cellulose filaments, sheets and nanocomposites with curli fibers were localized in situ at cellular resolution within the physiologically two-layered macrocolony biofilms of this "de-domesticated" strain. As an architectural element, cellulose confers cohesion and elasticity, i.e., tissue-like properties that-together with the cell-encasing curli fiber network and geometrical constraints in a growing colony-explain the formation of long and high ridges and elaborate wrinkles of wild-type macrocolonies. In contrast, a biofilm matrix consisting of the curli fiber network only is brittle and breaks into a pattern of concentric dome-shaped rings separated by deep crevices. These studies now set the stage for clarifying how regulatory networks and in particular c-di-GMP signaling operate in the three-dimensional space of highly structured and "tissue-like" bacterial biofilms.
Bacterial biofilms are highly structured multicellular communities whose formation involves flagella and an extracellular matrix of adhesins, amyloid fibers, and exopolysaccharides. Flagella are produced by still-dividing rod-shaped Escherichia coli cells during postexponential growth when nutrients become suboptimal. Upon entry into stationary phase, however, cells stop producing flagella, become ovoid, and generate amyloid curli fibers. These morphological changes, as well as accompanying global changes in gene expression and cellular physiology, depend on the induction of the stationary-phase sigma subunit of RNA polymerase, σS (RpoS), the nucleotide second messengers cyclic AMP (cAMP), ppGpp, and cyclic-di-GMP, and a biofilm-controlling transcription factor, CsgD. Using flagella, curli fibers, a CsgD::GFP reporter, and cell morphology as “anatomical” hallmarks in fluorescence and scanning electron microscopy, different physiological zones in macrocolony biofilms of E. coli K-12 can be distinguished at cellular resolution. Small ovoid cells encased in a network of curli fibers form the outer biofilm layer. Inner regions are characterized by heterogeneous CsgD::GFP and curli expression. The bottom zone of the macrocolonies features elongated dividing cells and a tight mesh of entangled flagella, the formation of which requires flagellar motor function. Also, the cells in the outer-rim growth zone produce flagella, which wrap around and tether cells together. Adjacent to this growth zone, small chains and patches of shorter curli-surrounded cells appear side by side with flagellated curli-free cells before curli coverage finally becomes confluent, with essentially all cells in the surface layer being encased in “curli baskets.”
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