Browsing by Author "Faith, Dominick R."
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item A Filamentous Bacteriophage Protein Inhibits Type IV Pili To Prevent Superinfection of Pseudomonas aeruginosa(American Society for Microbiology, 2022-02) Schmidt, Amelia K.; Fitzpatrick, Alexa D.; Schwartzkopf, Caleb M.; Faith, Dominick R.; Jennings, Laura K.; Coluccio, Alison; Hunt, Devin J.; Michaels, Lia A.; Hargil, Aviv; Chen, Qingquan; Bollyky, Paul L.; Dorward, David W.; Wachter, Jenny; Rosa, Patricia A.; Maxwell, Karen L.; Secor, Patrick R.Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen that causes infections in a variety of settings. Many P. aeruginosa isolates are infected by filamentous Pf bacteriophage integrated into the bacterial chromosome as a prophage. Pf virions can be produced without lysing P. aeruginosa. However, cell lysis can occur during superinfection, which occurs when Pf virions successfully infect a host lysogenized by a Pf prophage. Temperate phages typically encode superinfection exclusion mechanisms to prevent host lysis by virions of the same or similar species. In this study, we sought to elucidate the superinfection exclusion mechanism of Pf phage. Initially, we observed that P. aeruginosa that survive Pf superinfection are transiently resistant to Pf-induced plaquing and are deficient in twitching motility, which is mediated by type IV pili (T4P). Pf utilize T4P as a cell surface receptor, suggesting that T4P are suppressed in bacteria that survive superinfection. We tested the hypothesis that a Pf-encoded protein suppresses T4P to mediate superinfection exclusion by expressing Pf proteins in P. aeruginosa and measuring plaquing and twitching motility. We found that the Pf protein PA0721, which we termed Pf superinfection exclusion (PfsE), promoted resistance to Pf infection and suppressed twitching motility by binding the T4P protein PilC. Because T4P play key roles in biofilm formation and virulence, the ability of Pf phage to modulate T4P via PfsE has implications in the ability of P. aeruginosa to persist at sites of infection.Item Polyamines and linear DNA mediate bacterial threat assessment of bacteriophage infection(Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2023-02) de Mattos, Camilla D.; Faith, Dominick R.; Nemudryi, Artem; Schmidt, Amelia K.; Bublitz, DeAnna C.; Hammond, Lauren R.; Kinnersley, Margie; Schwartzkopf, Caleb M.; Robinson, Autumn J.; Joyce, Alex; Michaels, Lia A.; Brzozowski, Robert S.; Coluccio, Alison; Xing, Denghui David; Uchiyama, Jumpei; Jennings, Laura K.; Eswara, Prahathees; Wiedenheft, Blake; Secor, Patrick R.Monitoring the extracellular environment for danger signals is a critical aspect of cellular survival. However, the danger signals released by dying bacteria and the mechanisms bacteria use for threat assessment remain largely unexplored. Here, we show that lysis of Pseudomonas aeruginosa cells releases polyamines that are subsequently taken up by surviving cells via a mechanism that relies on Gac/Rsm signaling. While intracellular polyamines spike in surviving cells, the duration of this spike varies according to the infection status of the cell. In bacteriophage-infected cells, intracellular polyamines are maintained at high levels, which inhibits replication of the bacteriophage genome. Many bacteriophages package linear DNA genomes and linear DNA is sufficient to trigger intracellular polyamine accumulation, suggesting that linear DNA is sensed as a second danger signal. Collectively, these results demonstrate how polyamines released by dying cells together with linear DNA allow P. aeruginosa to make threat assessments of cellular injury.