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Recent
Articles
Tortosa P, Logsdon L, Kraigher B, Itoh Y, Mandic-Mulec I, Dubnau
D.
Specificity and genetic polymorphism of the Bacillus competence
quorum-sensing system.
J Bacteriol 2001 Jan;183(2):451-60
PMID: 11133937
A quorum-sensing mechanism involving the pheromone ComX and the
ComP-ComA two-component system controls natural competence in Bacillus
subtilis. ComX is expressed as a cytoplasmic inactive precursor
that is released into the extracellular medium as a cleaved, modified
decapeptide. This process requires the product of comQ. In the presence
of ComX, the membrane-localized ComP histidine kinase activates
the response regulator ComA. We compared the sequences of the quorum-sensing
genes from four closely related bacilli, and we report extensive
genetic polymorphism extending through comQ, comX, and the 5' two-thirds
of comP. This part of ComP encodes the membrane-localized and linker
domains of the sensor protein. We also determined the sequences
of the comX genes of four additional wild-type bacilli and tested
the in vivo activities of all eight pheromones on isogenic strains
containing four different ComP receptor proteins. A striking pattern
of specificity was discovered, providing strong evidence that the
pheromone contacts ComP directly. Furthermore, we show that coexpression
of comQ and comX in Escherichia coli leads to the production of
active pheromone in the medium, demonstrating that comQ is the only
dedicated protein required for the processing, modification, and
release of active competence pheromone. Some of the implications
of these findings for the evolution and the mechanism of the quorum-sensing
system are discussed.

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