c Yersinia pestis, which causes bubonic plague, forms biofilms in fleas, its insect vectors, as a means to enhance transmission. Biofilm development is positively regulated by hmsT, encoding a diguanylate cyclase that synthesizes the bacterial second messenger cyclic-di-GMP. Biofilm development is negatively regulated by the Rcs phosphorelay signal transduction system. In this study, we show that Rcs-negative regulation is accomplished by repressing transcription of hmsT.
Yersinia pestis, the agent of bubonic plague, infects fleas, its vectors, by producing bacterial biofilms that can colonize the insect foregut (19). Growth of the biofilm interferes with blood feeding by the infected fleas and potentiates regurgitative transmission. Complete blockage of the foregut by the bacterial biofilm can occur, and blocked fleas bite mammals repeatedly in futile feeding attempts, further enhancing transmission. Y. pestis biofilms, in which bacteria are surrounded by a self-synthesized polysaccharide-rich matrix, appear to be made only when the bacteria colonize fleas. Several proteins required for Y. pestis biofilms are proteolytically degraded at mammalian body temperatures (25), in vitro biofilms are greatly diminished at 37°C, and a Y. pestis strain defective for biofilm genes was nevertheless highly virulent in a mouse infection (3,22,32).Y. pestis biofilms are positively regulated by cyclic-di-GMP (cdi-GMP), which is synthesized by diguanylate cyclase (DGC) enzymes. The Y. pestis genome encodes several putative DGCs, but only two of them, HmsT and Y3730, are related to biofilm formation (3,8,22,32). Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, a bacterium closely related to Y. pestis, also makes biofilms that are regulated by hmsT (10). The biofilm-promoting activity of c-di-GMP has not been determined, but in other systems, c-di-GMP has been shown to be an allosteric activator of glycosyltransferases (27,28).Y. pestis and Y. pseudotuberculosis biofilms are negatively regulated by the Rcs phosphorelay system (33). Rcs consists of two membrane-bound proteins, RcsC and RcsD, a DNA-binding response regulator, RcsB, and an accessory protein, RcsA. In phosphorelays of this type, outputs can be dependent on RcsB alone, acting in homodimers, or on heterodimers of RcsB and RcsA (23). Genetic investigation showed that in Y. pestis, rcsA is a nonfunctional pseudogene, while in Y. pseudotuberculosis, rcsA is functional and represses biofilms (33). Although rcsD has a frameshift in Y.pestis, it is still functional and may dephosphorylate RcsB to derepress biofilms (33).The factors determining hmsT transcription have not been examined. In the present study, we show that in Y. pestis and Y. pseudotuberculosis, Rcs represses hmsT transcription.
MATERIALS AND METHODSBacterial strains and plasmids. The strains and plasmids used are shown in Table 1. CDY497 was made by a method to insert PCR products into the chromosome using the Red recombination system (11, 33). For strains containing ⌬lacZ::Cm, the same method was used, after which reporter constr...