Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Department of Molecular Biology, University of Gdańsk Gdańsk, Poland.
Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2013 Jan 4;2:166. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2012.00166. eCollection 2012.
Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) may cause bloody diarrhea and hemorrhagic colitis (HC), with subsequent systemic disease. Since genes coding for Shiga toxins (stx genes) are located on lambdoid prophages, their effective production occurs only after prophage induction. Such induction and subsequent lytic development of Shiga toxin-converting bacteriophages results not only in production of toxic proteins, but also in the lysis (and thus, the death) of the host cell. Therefore, one may ask the question: what is the benefit for bacteria to produce the toxin if they die due to phage production and subsequent cell lysis? Recently, a hypothesis was proposed (simultaneously but independently by two research groups) that STEC may benefit from Shiga toxin production as a result of toxin-dependent killing of eukaryotic cells such as unicellular predators or human leukocytes. This hypothesis could make sense only if we assume that prophage induction (and production of the toxin) occurs only in a small fraction of bacterial cells, thus, a few members of the population are sacrificed for the benefit of the rest, providing an example of "bacterial altruism." However, various reports indicating that the frequency of spontaneous induction of Shiga toxin-converting prophages is higher than that of other lambdoid prophages might seem to contradict the for-mentioned model. On the other hand, analysis of recently published results, discussed here, indicated that the efficiency of prophage excision under conditions that may likely occur in the natural habitat of STEC is sufficiently low to ensure survival of a large fraction of the bacterial host. A molecular mechanism by which partial prophage induction may occur is proposed. We conclude that the published data supports the proposed model of bacterial "altruism" where prophage induction occurs at a low enough frequency to render toxin production a positive selective force on the general STEC population.
产志贺毒素大肠杆菌(STEC)可能会引起血性腹泻和出血性结肠炎(HC),并随后导致全身疾病。由于编码志贺毒素(stx 基因)的基因位于 λ 样噬菌体中,因此只有在噬菌体诱导后才能有效地产生它们。这种诱导以及随后的产志贺毒素转导噬菌体的裂解性发育不仅导致毒性蛋白的产生,而且还导致宿主细胞的裂解(因此,死亡)。因此,人们可能会问一个问题:如果由于噬菌体的产生和随后的细胞裂解而导致细菌死亡,那么细菌生产毒素有什么好处?最近,提出了一个假设(同时由两个研究小组独立提出),即由于毒素依赖性杀伤单细胞捕食者或人类白细胞等真核细胞,STEC 可能会从志贺毒素的产生中受益。只有当我们假设只有一小部分细菌细胞发生噬菌体诱导(和毒素产生)时,该假设才有意义,因此,为了其余部分的利益,种群中的少数成员会被牺牲,从而提供了“细菌利他主义”的一个例子。然而,各种表明自发诱导产志贺毒素的噬菌体的频率高于其他 λ 样噬菌体的报道似乎与上述模型相矛盾。另一方面,对这里讨论的最近发表的结果进行的分析表明,在 STEC 可能存在于自然栖息地的条件下,噬菌体切除的效率足够低,可以确保大部分细菌宿主的存活。提出了一种部分噬菌体诱导可能发生的分子机制。我们得出结论,已发表的数据支持了所提出的细菌“利他主义”模型,其中噬菌体诱导以足够低的频率发生,以使毒素产生对一般 STEC 种群成为正向选择力。