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Resumen de T6SS intraspecific competition orchestrates Vibrio cholerae genotypic diversity

Benjamin Kostiuk, Daniel Unterweger, Daniele Provenzano, Stefan Pukatzki

  • Vibrio cholerae is a diverse species that inhabits a wide range of environments from copepods in brackish waterto the intestines of humans. In order to remain competitive, V. cholerae uses the versatile type-VI secretion system (T6SS) tosecrete anti-prokaryotic and anti-eukaryotic effectors. In addition to competing with other bacterial species, V. cholerae strainsalso compete with one another. Some strains are able to coexist, and are referred to as belonging to the same compatibility group.Challenged by diverse competitors in various environments, different V. choleare strains secrete different combination of effectors– presumably to best suit their niche. Interestingly, all pandemic V. cholerae strains encode the same three effectors. In additionto the diversity displayed in the encoded effectors, the regulation of V. cholerae also differs between strains. Two main layersof regulation appear to exist. One strategy connects T6SS activity with behavior that is suited to fighting eukaryotic cells, whilethe other is linked with natural competence – the ability of the bacterium to acquire and incorporate extracellular DNA. Thisrelationship between bacterial killing and natural competence is potentially a source of diversification for V. cholerae as it hasbeen shown to incorporate the DNA of cells recently killed through T6SS activity. It is through this process that we hypothesizethe transfer of virulence factors, including T6SS effector modules, to happen. Switching of T6SS effectors has the potential tochange the range of competitors V. cholerae can kill and to newly define which strains V. cholerae can co-exist with, two importantparameters for survival in diverse environments.


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