Chitin Induces Natural Competence in Vibrio cholerae
Stanford Medicine · Stanford University
Abstract
The mosaic-structured Vibrio cholerae genome points to the importance of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in the evolution of this human pathogen. We showed that V. cholerae can acquire new genetic material by natural transformation during growth on chitin, a biopolymer that is abundant in aquatic habitats (e.g., from crustacean exoskeletons), where it lives as an autochthonous microbe. Transformation competence was found to require a type IV pilus assembly complex, a putative DNA binding protein, and three convergent regulatory cascades, which are activated by chitin, increasing cell density, and nutrient limitation, a decline in growth rate, or stress.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 20
Authors
5- KLKarin Lederballe MeibomCorresponding
Stanford Medicine, Stanford University
- MBMelanie BlokeschCorresponding
Stanford Medicine, Stanford University
- NDNadia Dolganov
Stanford Medicine, Stanford University
- CWCheng-Yen Wu
Stanford Medicine, Stanford University
- GKGary K. SchoolnikCorresponding
Stanford Medicine, Stanford University
Topics & keywords
- Vibrio cholerae
- Pilus
- Chitin
- Horizontal gene transfer
- Biology
- Microbiology
- Gene
- Genome