The function of AI-2 in many bacteria and the physiological role of LuxS, the enzyme responsible for its production, remain matters of debate. Here, we show that in Staphylococcus aureus the luxS gene forms a monocistronic transcriptional unit under the control of a 70 -dependent promoter. The gene was transcribed throughout growth under a variety of conditions, including intracellular growth in MAC-T cells. AI-2 was produced in rich media under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, peaking during the transition to stationary phase, but was hardly detectable in a sulfur-limited defined medium. In the presence of glucose or under anaerobic conditions, cultures retained considerable AI-2 activity after entry into stationary phase. Inactivation of luxS in various S. aureus strains did not affect virulence-associated traits, such as production of hemolysins and extracellular proteases, biofilm formation, and the agr signaling system. Conversely, AI-2 production remained unchanged in an agr mutant. However, luxS mutants grown in a sulfur-limited defined medium exhibited a growth defect. When grown together with the wild type in mixed culture, luxS mutants of various S. aureus strains showed reduced ability to compete for growth under these conditions. In contrast, a complemented luxS mutant grew as well as the parent strain, suggesting that the observed growth defect was of an intracellular nature and had not been caused by either second-site mutations or the lack of a diffusible factor. However, the LuxS/AI-2 system does not appear to contribute to the overall fitness of S. aureus RN6390B during intracellular growth in epithelial cells: the wild type and a luxS mutant showed very similar growth patterns after their internalization by MAC-T cells.Many bacteria, including pathogens and commensals, are known to communicate via diffusible signal molecules (26,63). It is often assumed that these molecules are employed to regulate genes in concert with cell population density (quorum sensing). Bacteria of the genus Staphylococcus are known to possess an autoinducing peptide (AIP)-based signaling system, encoded by the agr locus, the function of which has been studied in detail in Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis (for reviews see references 36 and 49). In S. aureus, this system is involved in the regulation of many exoproteins, including exoenzymes, exotoxins, and surface proteins (49). Sequence analysis of completed genomes revealed that Staphylococcus spp., like many other bacteria, also contain a luxS gene and therefore may employ a second signaling system based on the furanone derivative, autoinducer 2 (AI-2).The LuxS/AI-2 system has been analyzed in detail in Vibrio spp., in particular Vibrio harveyi and Vibrio cholerae, where it is involved in the regulation of bioluminescence and virulenceassociated traits, respectively (24,25,34,40) (for a review, see reference 76). Synthesis of AI-2 depends on the enzyme LuxS (55, 71), which generates the AI-2 precursor 4,5-dihydroxy-2,3-pentanedione (DPD) from S-r...