An auxin controls bacterial antibiotics production
Metadatos
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Nucleic Acids Research
Fecha
2018-11-30Referencia bibliográfica
30; 46(21):11229-11238
Resumen
The majority of clinically used antibiotics originate
from bacteria. As the need for new antibiotics grows,
large-scale genome sequencing and mining approaches are being used to identify novel antibiotics.
However, this task is hampered by the fact that many
antibiotic biosynthetic clusters are not expressed under laboratory conditions. One strategy to overcome
this limitation is the identification of signals that activate the expression of silent biosynthetic pathways.
Here, we report the use of high-throughput screening to identify signals that control the biosynthesis
of the acetyl-CoA carboxylase inhibitor antibiotic andrimid in the broad-range antibiotic-producing rhizobacterium Serratia plymuthica A153. We reveal that
the pathway-specific transcriptional activator AdmX
recognizes the auxin indole-3-acetic acid (IAA). IAA
binding causes conformational changes in AdmX
that result in the inhibition of the expression of the
andrimid cluster and the suppression of antibiotic
production. We also show that IAA synthesis by
pathogenic and beneficial plant-associated bacteria
inhibits andrimid production in A153. Because IAA
is a signalling molecule that is present across all domains of life, this study highlights the importance of
intra- and inter-kingdom signalling in the regulation
of antibiotic synthesis. Our discovery unravels, for
the first time, an IAA-dependent molecular mechanism for the regulation of antibiotic synthesis.