Abstract
Vibrio cholerae, the etiological pathogen of cholera, employs its type VI secretion system (T6SS) as an effective weapon to survive in highly competitive communities. Antibacterial and anti-eukaryotic functions of the T6SS depend on its secreted effectors that target multiple cellular processes. However, the mechanisms that account for effector diversity and different effectiveness during interspecies competition remain elusive. Here we report that environmental cations and temperature play a key role in dictating cellular response and effector effectiveness during interspecies competition mediated by the T6SS of V. cholerae. We found that V. cholerae could employ its cell-wall-targeting effector TseH to outcompete the otherwise resistant Escherichia coli and the V. cholerae immunity deletion mutant ∆tsiH when Mg2+ or Ca2+ was supplemented. Transcriptome and genetic analyses demonstrate that the metal-sensing PhoPQ two-component system is important for Mg2+-dependent sensitivity. Competition analysis in infant mice shows that TseH was active under in vivo conditions. Using a panel of V. cholerae single-effector active mutants, we further show that E. coli also exhibited variable susceptibilities to other T6SS effectors depending on cations and temperatures, respectively. Lastly, V. cholerae effector VasX could sensitize Pseudomonas aeruginosa to its intrinsically resistant antibiotic irgasan in a temperature-dependent manner. Collectively, these findings suggest that abiotic factors, that V. cholerae frequently encounters in natural and host environments, could modulate cellular responses and dictate the competitive fitness conferred by the T6SS effectors in complex multispecies communities.
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Introduction
Living in complex natural and host environments, microbes frequently compete for limited nutrients and ecological niches. To survive, microbes have evolved multiple effective weapons [1,2,3,4], one of which is the type VI protein secretion system (T6SS) commonly found in gram-negative bacteria [5,6,7]. The T6SS structure consists of a transmembrane complex (TssJLM), a baseplate (TssEFGK), and a double-tubular structure with the Hcp inner tube surrounded by the contractile outer sheath (TssB/C, also known as VipA/B) [8,9,10,11]. The Hcp tube is sharpened by a VgrG-PAAR spike complex [12,13,14]. Upon sheath contraction, the T6SS could translocate the Hcp tube-spike complex and the associated effectors to the extracellular environment or directly into neighboring recipient cells [15,16,17].
Effectors are T6SS-secreted toxins exhibiting antibacterial and anti-eukaryotic activities, and they collectively dictate the T6SS functions [17,18,19,20]. The antibacterial effectors include cell-wall disrupting enzymes, membrane-damaging toxins, nucleases, NAD(P)+ hydrolase, ADP-ribosyl transferase, and (p)ppApp synthetase [21,22,23,24,25,26]. To confer self-protection, bacteria encode effector-cognate immunity proteins that can neutralize effector toxicities through specific protein–protein interactions [21, 27,28,29]. However, recent studies have demonstrated that such specific protection can be insufficient and bacteria require multiple stress response pathways that collectively provide innate-immunity-like general protection against effectors [30]. These include production of extracellular polysaccharides [18, 31], oxidative stress response [32, 33], envelope stress responses [18], acid and osmotic stress responses [19]. In addition, spatial separation at the community level can also protect susceptible cells from T6SS aggressors [34,35,36,37,38].
T6SS species often encode multiple effector modules which may be used synergistically or independently for killing a broad spectrum of competitors [39,40,41,42]. Effectors may also exhibit species-specific or condition-specific toxicities. For example, the cell-wall targeting effector TseH in Vibrio cholerae is highly toxic to Aeromonas dhakensis and several other waterborne species that V. cholerae may encounter in natural environments, but it shows little toxicity against Escherichia coli or the V. cholerae immunity gene deletion mutant ∆tsiH when it is delivered by the T6SS [18, 43]. Similarly, a pore-forming toxin Tse4 in Pseudomonas aeruginosa exhibits preference in high-salinity environments and synergy with other effectors [42]. The difference in susceptibility may be attributed to effector capabilities and nonspecific stress responses in bacteria [18,19,20], but the exact mechanisms of conditional toxicity remain elusive.
V. cholerae causes the pandemic cholera disease that poses a serious threat to public health globally [44]. Commonly transmitted through contaminated water, V. cholerae lives in a complex lifestyle of being motile in water and sessile in biofilm and adapts to near constantly changing conditions affected by nutrient availability, temperature, and stresses in the aquatic environments and in different hosts [45]. The T6SS is a crucial tool for V. cholerae to compete with other bacteria [46], defend against predatory eukaryotes [5], assimilate exogenous DNA [47], and colonize in the host gut [48]. Recent genomic research has suggested that the T6SS is likely a key factor enabling the dominance of the current 7th pandemic V. cholerae that has replaced the classical V. cholerae strains in global cholera outbreaks [49], highlighting the importance of the T6SS-mediated competition in understanding the evolution of cholera pandemics.
In this study, we report that a number of abiotic environmental factors, including cation, temperature, and antibiotic, play crucial roles in T6SS-mediated interspecies competition by modulating target-species cellular response to specific effectors. Using a panel of single-effector active V. cholerae V52 mutants and competition assays [17, 18], we show that trace amounts of divalent cations, Mg2+ and Ca2+, could sensitize the otherwise resistant E. coli to TseH toxicity. Using transcriptome and mutational analyses, we further show that the PhoPQ two-component system, a known sensor of environmental Mg2+ [50], is important for E. coli survival against TseH. Competition assay in vivo shows that TseH was active during V. cholerae colonization in infant mice. We have also found that temperature is a crucial factor determining the susceptibility of E. coli to other V. cholerae effectors, VasX, VgrG3, and TseL [16, 29, 51]. In addition, the expression of VasX could abolish the intrinsic resistance of P. aeruginosa to irgasan in a temperature-dependent manner. Collectively, our data indicate that T6SS-mediated interspecies competition is not only dependent on the functions of T6SS effector proteins but also tightly modulated by environmental abiotic factors that dictate the cellular response and susceptibility of target species to effector toxicities.
Results
T6SS-delivered TseH is conditionally toxic to E. coli depending on agar sources
We have previously reported that the V. cholerae tseH+ only mutant, with all the other antibacterial effectors inactivated, could not outcompete E. coli due to the nonspecific protection conferred by the envelope stress response pathways [18]. However, we serendipitously found that TseH toxicity was largely affected by the source of agars used for competition. When agar source 1 was used, we reproduced the earlier observation and showed that the survival of E. coli competed with the tseH+ only mutant was comparable to that competed with the T6SS-null mutant ∆vasK and the four-effector-inactive mutant 4effc (Fig. 1A, Supplementary Fig. 1A) [18]. However, when a different source of agar was used (source 2), E. coli survival was reduced by 10,000-fold in competition with the V. cholerae tseH+ only mutant, relative to that competed with the 4effc and the ∆vasK mutant (Fig. 1A, Supplementary Fig. 1A). Survival of E. coli remained the same under both agar conditions for samples competed with wild-type V. cholerae, the ∆vasK, or the 4effc mutant, separately.
Mg2+ and Ca2+ stimulate TseH-mediated killing against E. coli
To determine the difference between agar sources that affects the TseH killing efficiency, we used XRF (X-Ray Fluorescence) to compare element contents in these two agar samples. XRF results show that Ca and Mg levels were substantially higher in the source 2 agar (Supplementary Table 1). Using ICP-MS (Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry), we further quantified Mg and Ca contents. In the source 1 agar, Mg and Ca levels were 85.83 ± 2.40 mg/kg and 16.92 ± 0.30 mg/kg, respectively. However, in the source 2 agar, Mg and Ca levels were 515.29 ± 13.57 mg/kg and 200.93 ± 9.29 mg/kg, about sixfold and tenfold higher than their levels in the source 1 agar, respectively.
To test if the observed high levels of Mg and Ca are responsible for the enhanced TseH-mediated killing against E. coli, we added additional Mg2+ or Ca2+ to the source 1 agar and tested their effects on bacterial competition. Indeed, the addition of Mg2+ or Ca2+ significantly reduced E. coli survival upon TseH-mediated attack, with Ca2+ showing a stronger effect (Fig. 1B, Supplementary Fig. 1B). Notably, the combination of 0.27 mM Mg2+ and 0.07 mM Ca2+, the amount comparable to the levels in source 2 agar, did not reduce E. coli survival to the same levels as in source 2 agar, suggesting other factors in the source 2 agar also contribute to the increased TseH toxicity.
To further confirm that metal ions play a critical role in stimulating TseH-mediated killing against E. coli, we washed the source 2 agar powder with a metal-chelator EDTA solution to remove divalent cations. Results showed that EDTA-treatment abolished TseH-mediated killing on the source 2 agar, while the deionized water (ddH2O)-treated source 2 agar could still sustain TseH killing (Fig. 1C, Supplementary Fig. 1C). Either EDTA-treatment or water-treatment did not support TseH-mediated killing on source 1 agar plates.
We also tested competition between the tseH+ mutant and E. coli using the defined M9 medium. Both source 1 agar and source 2 agar plates supported TseH-mediated killing, with the source 2 agar plate showing a stronger killing (Fig. 1D, Supplementary Fig. 1D). Because the M9 medium contains Mg2+ and Ca2+, we also tested the effects when these two cations were omitted. Results show that only the source 2 agar supported TseH-mediated killing (Fig. 1D, Supplementary Fig. 1D). Collectively, these results demonstrate that TseH-mediated toxicity is largely dependent on environmental Mg2+ and Ca2+ levels.
Conditional toxicity of TseH is also applicable to V. cholerae immunity-defective mutant
Next, we tested whether cation supplement could enable TseH to kill its cognate immunity gene mutant ∆tsiH, which has been previously shown to be resistant due to the protection of immunity-independent defenses primarily mediated by the WigKR two-component system [18]. We constructed a ∆tsiH deletion mutant lacking the paar2-tseH-tsiH three-gene operon in the 4effc mutant background and used it as prey for competition against the tseH+ strain or the 4effc strain, separately. Competition results show that, like E. coli, the ∆tsiH mutant was sensitive to the tseH+ strain on source 2 agar plates but not on source 1 agar plates (Fig. 1E, Supplementary Fig. 1E). Supplement of 0.3 mM Ca2+ to the source 1 agar reduced the ∆tsiH mutant survival significantly, while a combination of 0.27 mM Mg2+ and 0.07 mM Ca2+, or 0.3 mM Mg2 alone had minor effects. These results show that TseH-mediated killing in V. cholerae could be stimulated by Ca2+ but not Mg2+.
The addition of Mg2+ and Ca2+ does not affect T6SS secretion or TseH activity
To test whether the stimulating effect of Mg2+ and Ca2+ on TseH-mediated killing is due to increased T6SS secretion, we used the secretion of Hcp as an indicator for T6SS activities [5]. The results show that Hcp was secreted to the same levels with or without Mg2+ and Ca2+ supplement for both the wild type and the tseH+ samples, suggesting the addition of Mg2+ and Ca2+ does not increase the already highly active T6SS secretion (Fig. 2A, Supplementary Fig. 2A). We next determined whether TseH requires the supplement of Mg2+ and Ca2+ for its enzymatic activity. The recently solved TseH structure suggests it is a NlpC/P60-family cysteine endopeptidase with its catalytic residue blocked by a connecting loop structure [18]. Because TseH has been shown to be inactive in vitro [18], we used a TseH-sensitive prey A. dhakensis [18] and competition assays to evaluate TseH secretion and activity. Results show that, with and without Mg2+ and Ca2+, the survival of A. dhakensis was reduced about 2-logs by the tseH+ strain (Fig. 2B, Supplementary Fig. 2B), relative to that competed with the 4effc mutant and the ∆vasK mutant. Therefore, TseH toxicity is independent of Mg2+ and Ca2+ in A. dhakensis. Taken together, these results suggest that the supplement of Mg2+ and Ca2+ does not affect T6SS secretion or TseH activity but likely changes the cellular response of E. coli.
PhoPQ two-component system protects E. coli against T6SS-delivered TseH
To understand why the supplement of divalent Mg2+/Ca2+ cations would sensitize E. coli to TseH, we tested the effects of the PhoPQ two-component system that is a key regulatory system activated in response to Mg2+ starvation in E. coli [52, 53]. As a transmembrane histidine kinase, PhoQ senses low Mg2+ and activates PhoP and its regulated genes [54]. We constructed the ∆phoQ mutant and the phoQD179L mutant in E. coli, the latter a PhoQ constitutively active mutant [55]. Competition assays with the tseH+ strain show that the deletion of phoQ rendered E. coli significantly more sensitive to TseH with or without supplementing Mg2+ and Ca2+ (Fig. 3A, Supplementary Fig. 3A). Although the survival of both wild type and the two phoQ mutants was reduced when Mg2+ and Ca2+ were added, the phoQD179L mutant survived significantly better than the wild type E. coli. Notably, the reduced survival of the phoQD179L mutant by cation supplement also suggests that activation of the PhoPQ regulon is insufficient for full protection against the TseH-mediated killing.
Because prey cell survival may be affected by the efficiency of direct contact between T6SS killer and prey cells during the competition assays, we next compared the survival of E. coli wild type and the ∆phoQ mutant when TseH was periplasmically expressed with a Tat (twin-arginine translocation) secretion signal [18, 43]. The results show a nearly 100-fold reduced survival of the E. coli ∆phoQ mutant expressing wild-type TseH relative to that expressing TseHH64A (the catalytically inactive mutant of TseH [18]), while there was about a tenfold reduced survival when TseH and TseHH64A were individually expressed in E. coli wild type (Fig. 3B, Supplementary Fig. 3B). These results collectively suggest that the PhoPQ system is important for protecting E. coli against TseH under low Mg2+ conditions, representing an additional immunity-independent mechanism to the recently reported envelope stress response systems [18].
Transcriptome analysis reveals induction of stress response genes by T6SS-delivered TseH
To understand how E. coli responds to cation supplement and how the PhoPQ regulation confers protection against TseH, we employed transcriptome analysis to examine the effect of cation supplement in E. coli with and without V. cholerae competitors. We first tested how the supplement of Mg2+ affects gene expression in E. coli by growing E. coli on LB source 1 agar with and without 0.3 mM Mg2+. Exponentially growing E. coli cells were plated on LB plates for 30 min prior to RNA extraction. RNA-seq analysis shows near-identical transcriptomes (Supplementary Fig. 4A, B, Dataset 1). These results indicate that E. coli cells do not exhibit drastic changes in response to Mg2+ supplement under the conditions tested.
To understand how E. coli responds to T6SS-delivered TseH, we performed transcriptome analysis of E. coli competed with the V. cholerae 4effc or tseH+ mutants on LB source 1 agar plates with or without 0.3 mM Mg2+ or 0.3 mM Ca2+ (Supplementary Table 2, Dataset 2). To maximize the delivery of TseH from V. cholerae to E. coli, we used a mixing ratio of V. cholerae to E. coli at 10 to 1 and co-incubated the mixture for variable times until the survival of E. coli was reduced by 10-fold (Supplementary Fig. 3C, D). Specifically, because Mg 2+ supplement had a weaker effect than Ca2+ on TseH-mediated killing (Fig. 1B, E), we performed competition under Mg2+-supplemented conditions for 3 h co-incubation and used 1.5 h co-incubation for Ca2+ conditions. Transcriptome data show that multiple genes responsible for maintaining cell-envelope integrity were upregulated in E. coli cells attacked by the V. cholerae tseH+ mutant under all conditions (Supplementary Fig. 5A–D, Dataset 2). These include the BaeR regulon genes spy, osmB, wza, wzc, the RcsB regulon gene rcsA, and a periplasmic protease gene degP, which are consistent with the previous report [18]. In addition, genes induced by osmotic pressure such as osmY and osmE were also upregulated, suggesting TseH toxicity may disturb the osmotic balance.
When comparing the effect of Mg2+ on gene expression in E. coli attacked by the tseH+ V. cholerae, we found two PhoPQ regulon genes mgtA and rstA [53, 56] were significantly upregulated in samples without Mg2+ supplement but they were not upregulated in E. coli samples competed with the effector-inactive 4effc mutant with or without Mg2+ (Fig. 3C, D). Considering that deletion of phoQ rendered E. coli more sensitive to TseH (Fig. 3A), these data collectively suggest that TseH-mediated toxicity may elicit a specific protective response of the PhoPQ regulon in E. coli under low Mg2+ conditions.
Effect of Ca2+ is independent of the PhoPQ pathway
Similar to Mg2+ treatment, Ca2+ supplement significantly increased the number of differentially expressed genes in E. coli between the tseH+ and the 4effc samples, while the transcriptomes of E. coli in these 1.5 h co-incubation samples differed by only 6 genes with moderate changes without supplemented Ca2+ (Supplementary Fig. 5A, B). Highly induced genes under Ca2+ conditions by the tseH+ competition include a number of known stress response genes, rcsA, katE, osmY, and osmB, indicating stress response pathways were activated (Dataset 2, Fig. 3E). Notably, genes belonging to the PhoPQ regulon were not differentially expressed under Ca2+-supplemented conditions (Fig. 3C–E, Supplementary Fig. 5E, F), which might be attributed to the differential responses of PhoPQ to Mg2+ and Ca2+ [57]. Accordingly, using competition assays against the V. cholerae tseH+ mutant, we found that deletion of phoQ did not further reduce E. coli survival in the presence of Mg2+ but significantly reduced E. coli survival with Ca2+ supplement or when no cation was added (Fig. 3F, Supplementary Fig. 3E). These results suggest that the addition of Mg2+ but not Ca2+ could suppress the PhoPQ system under the conditions tested.
TseH is active under environmental and in vivo conditions
Due to the prevalence of Mg2+ and Ca2+ in the environment, we postulated that TseH is likely important for T6SS-mediated competitive fitness of V. cholerae under diverse conditions. Using crude agar extracts from algae to mimic a natural surface V. cholerae may grow on in the environment, we found that V. cholerae could use TseH to effectively outcompete E. coli or the ∆tsiH mutant of V. cholerae (Fig. 4A, B, Supplementary Fig. 6A, B). Because the T6SS is shown to be important for V. cholerae colonization in the host [48], we also tested whether TseH is active in vivo using an infant mouse infection model. Competition assays show that survival of the ∆tsiH mutant was significantly reduced by the V. cholerae tseH+ mutant in comparison with its survival against the effector-inactive 4effc mutant (Fig. 4C), indicating TseH contributes to the in vivo fitness of V. cholerae.
Conditional sensitivity is generally applicable to other T6SS effectors
Having established that environmental cations affect E. coli sensitivity to TseH, we next examined whether similar effects are applicable to the other three antibacterial effectors in V. cholerae, the lipase TseL, the colicin-like VasX, and the lysozyme VgrG3 [16, 29, 51]. Through screening a panel of single-effector active mutants of V. cholerae in competition with E. coli under different conditions, we made two key observations. First, E. coli grown on the source 2 agar was substantially more sensitive to the lipase effector TseL than E. coli on the source 1 agar (Fig. 5A, Supplementary Fig. 7A). Treatment of agar sources with EDTA abolished such difference and increased E. coli survival on source 2 agar (Fig. 5B, Supplementary Fig. 7B). By supplementing the source 1 agar with 0.3 mM Mg2+, Ca2+, Ni2+, and Cu2+, separately, we found that none of the cations increased E. coli sensitivity to TseL-toxicity (Fig. 5C, Supplementary Fig. 7C). These results suggest that E. coli sensitivity to TseL differs from that to TseH but is likely also modulated by EDTA-chelated cations. Second, E. coli displayed temperature-dependent sensitivity to effectors. Competition results show that the relative survival of E. coli was significantly reduced at 30 °C in comparison to that at 37 °C when E. coli was competed with the vasX+ and the vgrG3+ mutants, separately (Fig. 5D, Supplementary Fig. 7D). In contrast, the survival of E. coli was significantly increased at 30 °C relative to that at 37 °C when E. coli was competed with the tseL+ strain (Fig. 5D, Supplementary Fig. 7D). These results clearly demonstrate that the T6SS-mediated interspecies competition is modulated by environmental conditions.
Expression of VasX sensitizes P. aeruginosa to irgasan in a temperature-dependent manner
We have previously reported that periplasmic expression of VasX using a Tat secretion signal is highly toxic in E. coli but not in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1, an important opportunistic pathogen [19]. We thus tested whether the resistance of P. aeruginosa to VasX is temperature-dependent. First, we confirmed this resistance phenotype by comparing the survival of PAO1 expressing plasmid-borne Tat-VasX or its inactive mutant Tat-VasX∆C16 [17] at 37 °C on LB plates containing irgasan and gentamycin, two antibiotics that select for intrinsic resistance of PAO1 and the plasmid vector, respectively (Fig. 5E). However, when Tat-VasX was induced at 30 °C, we found that survival of PAO1 was reduced to undetectable levels (Fig. 5E). Interestingly, the killing of PAO1 by Tat-VasX was dependent on the presence of irgasan, since survival of PAO1 was unaffected by Tat-VasX on LB plates containing only gentamycin at both 30 and 37 °C (Supplementary Fig. 7E). These results suggest that expression of VasX at 30 °C, albeit insufficient to cause cell death directly, can disturb the intrinsic resistance of P. aeruginosa to irgasan (Fig. 5E, Supplementary Fig. 7E).
Discussion
In this study, we demonstrate how abiotic environmental factors, cations and temperature, can have profound effects on the outcome of T6SS-mediated competition. We have delineated effector-specific effects using a panel of V. cholerae single-effector-active mutants, which enable target cells to respond and survive single-effector attacks rather than being overwhelmed by multiple and simultaneously delivered effectors by wild-type T6SS cells. Of the four V. cholerae antibacterial effectors, TseH and TseL are influenced by divalent cations while TseL, VgrG3, and VasX exhibit temperature-dependent efficacies in killing E. coli. We show that the Mg2+-sensing PhoPQ system in E. coli plays a key protective role while the supplement of Mg2+ likely suppresses such protection. Periplasmic expression of the colicin-like VasX does not directly kill P. aeruginosa but disturbs the intrinsic resistance of P. aeruginosa to irgasan in a temperature-dependent manner. Collectively, these findings not only reveal the importance of abiotic factors in modulating cellular responses to specific effectors in the context of interspecies competition but also implicate the prevalence and diverse mechanisms of conditional sensitivity to effectors in different organisms.
Almost all T6SS species secrete multiple effectors that may act synergistically to contribute to T6SS-mediated competitive fitness [34, 40, 42]. However, many effectors are phenotypically inactive, hindering the full understanding of the ecological functions of the T6SS. Our previous study has shown that effector functions may be masked due to the protection of envelope stress responses [18]. Here, we show that effector efficacy can be activated by Mg2+ or Ca2+ cations or a temperature shift, which V. cholerae likely commonly encounters during its natural host-environment transmission cycle. The efficacy of effectors in P. aeruginosa also varies depending on salinity, pH, and aerobic conditions [42]. The observations that VasX could sensitize P. aeruginosa to irgasan implicate a potential synergy between the T6SS effectors and other antimicrobial compounds within complex polymicrobial communities. Considering the prevalence of T6SS organisms, including plant and host pathogens, as well as the diversity of effectors in each species, these results highlight the necessity of considering the ecologically relevant environmental factors when studying the numerous cryptic effectors of protein secretion systems, especially for those causing nonlethal yet critical physiological changes.
Mg2+ and Ca2+ are known to have critical cellular functions, but their effects on dictating cellular survival in the context of T6SS-mediated interspecies competition have been largely unknown. As the most abundant divalent cation in living cells, Mg2+ neutralizes the negative charges of biomolecules, including nucleotides and nucleic acids, membrane phospholipids, as well as serving as an indispensable cofactor in various enzymes [50, 58, 59]. Ca2+ also plays a key role in multiple cellular processes including motility and cell division processes [60, 61]. Due to the critical role Mg2+ and Ca2+ play in bacteria, their concentrations are tightly regulated [59, 62]. Under low Mg2+ conditions, the PhoPQ system is activated to regulate a large number of genes involved in virulence, metal uptake, and other important functions [50, 59]. In Klebsiella pneumoniae, the PhoPQ system is important for activating the T6SS expression upon attacks by T6SS active competitors or by the antibiotic colistin [33]. Here, we show that PhoPQ confers key protection to E. coli against TseH toxicity under low Mg2+ conditions. Because activation of the PhoPQ system is known to strengthen the outer-membrane (OM) barrier by modifying OM components including lipopolysaccharides, glycerophospholipids, and OM-bound proteins [63,64,65,66,67], the fortified and stiff OM barrier may protect cells not only from external T6SS attacks, as the exopolysaccharides matrix does in V. cholerae [31], but also from cell-wall damages elicited by effectors [68]. Collectively, these results suggest a strong connection between environmental Mg2+ and T6SS-mediated competition through the PhoPQ system in diverse bacterial species.
Microbes have been found in almost all ecological niches on earth and contribute to a variety of functions ranging from macroscale carbon recycling and waste removal to individual-level host health and disease. These functions are often determined by polymicrobial communities with extensive interspecies interactions. The outcome of T6SS-mediated competition is determined by diverse factors including the number and type of the secreted effectors [34], the frequency of T6SS firing correlated with energy state [34], the immunity protein-dependent specific protection [21], the nonspecific stress response pathways in killer and prey cells [18, 20], and the availability of nutrients [69, 70]. Environmental factors have previously been implicated in modulating effector efficacy and synergy in T6SS killer cells [42], but here we show that cation and temperature play a major role in prey cell susceptibility to effector toxicities, thereby affecting T6SS-mediated competition which may have significant ecological impact on community composition and pathogen evolution, the latter exemplified in the sequential displacement of V. cholerae pandemic strains [49].
Although we have yet to determine the exact physiological response in prey cells that accounts for the temperature and cation-dependent sensitivity to different effectors, we speculate numerous factors could be involved including membrane composition, envelope stability, stress response, and enzyme stability, which may be directly or indirectly influenced by cation and temperature changes. Nonetheless, these findings demonstrate even a quite narrow difference in common environmental parameters could have determined the life-or-death fate of bacterial cells. Our study may serve as an alluding primer to better understand the T6SS-mediated functions in broad ecological contexts, including dynamics of polymicrobial communities and the evolution of their defense and attack mechanisms, as well as the complex roles of seemingly redundant yet finetuned sensing and regulatory pathways for cells to survive in diverse ecological niches.
Methods
Strains and growth conditions
Strains and plasmids used in this study are described in Supplementary Table 3. All constructs were verified by sequencing. Primers are available in Dataset 3. Bacteria were grown in LB([w/v] 1% tryptone, 0.5% yeast extract, 0.5% NaCl) at 37 °C aerobically. Antibiotics and inducers were used at following concentrations: kanamycin (25 µg/mL for E. coli, 50 µg/mL for V. cholerae and A. dhakensis), streptomycin (100 µg/mL), chloramphenicol (2.5 µg/mL for V. cholerae and 25 µg/mL for E. coli), irgasan (25 µg/mL), gentamycin (20 µg/mL), L-arabinose ([w/v] 0.1% or 0.01% as indicated), IPTG (0.1 mM or 1 mM as indicated). Tryptone (BIO BASIC, TG217(G211)), yeast extract (BIO BASIC, G0961), source-1-agar (BIO BASIC, FB0010), source-2-agar (Sangon Biotech, A505255-0250).
EDTA treatment of agar powder
Agar powder was washed with 0.1 M EDTA (Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) solution for 5 min with vortex, followed by deionized water washing 5 times to remove residual EDTA. Then the treated agar was dried and could be used for bacterial competition experiments.
Bacterial competition assay
Competing strains were grown overnight in LB with appropriate antibiotics. Killer cells were then sub-cultured to OD600 = 1. For the interspecies competition of V. cholerae with E. coli, killer and prey cells were mixed at a ratio of 5:1 and co-incubated on LB-agar plates or M9-agar (6 g Na2HPO4, 3 g KH2PO4, 0.5 g NaCl, 1 g NH4Cl, 1 mM MgSO4, 0.1 mM CaCl2, [w/v] 0.1% glucose, 1.3% agar) plates at 37 °C or 30 °C (as indicated) for 3 h. For the intraspecies competition between V. cholerae cells, killer and prey cells were mixed at a ratio of 20:1 (because V. cholerae was more resistant to TseH than E. coli) and co-incubated on LB-agar plates at 37 °C for 20 h (or 3 h when using the raw agar). After co-incubation, the survival of killer and prey cells were enumerated by 10-fold serial plating on LB plates with selective antibiotics. The mean Log10 c.f.u of the recovered killer and prey strains was plotted and error bars show the mean ± standard deviation of at least three biological replicates. Two-tailed Student’s t test or ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple comparison test was used to determine p values.
XRF and ICP analyses
XRF (X-Ray Fluorescence) and ICP (Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry) analyses were done by the Instrumental Analysis Center in Shanghai Jiao Tong University. For XRF analysis, the agar powder was pressed into disks (30 mm diameter) and performed with an XRF (XRF-1800, SHIMADZU). For ICP analysis, the two agar samples were digested with 5 mL concentrated nitric acid and diluted to 50 mL with ultrapure water. After samples were prepared, elemental analysis was performed with an ICP (Avio 500, PerkinElmer).
Protein secretion assay
Strains were grown overnight in LB with appropriate antibiotics. Cells were then sub-cultured to OD600 = 1 with or without Mg2+ and Ca2+. Then, 2 ml of OD600~1 cells were collected by centrifugation at 2500 × g for 3 min and resuspended in 1 mL fresh LB. Resuspended cells were placed at 30 °C for 1 h and centrifuged at 10,000 × g for 2 min at room temperature (RT). The cell pellet was used as the whole-cell sample. The supernatant was centrifuged at 10,000 × g for 2 min again as the secretion sample. All samples were mixed with SDS-loading dye, boiled at 98 °C for 10 min, followed by SDS-PAGE (sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) analysis and Western blotting analysis.
Western blotting analysis
After electrophoresis in a 12% SDS-PAGE gel, proteins were transferred to a PVDF membrane (Bio-Rad). Then, the protein-bound membrane was blocked with 5% [w/v] non-fat milk in TBST (50 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, 0.1% [v/v] Tween-20, pH 7.6) buffer for 1 h at RT. After blocking, the membrane was sequentially incubated with primary and secondary HRP (horseradish peroxidase)-conjugated antibodies in TBST with 1% [w/v] milk for 1 h at RT. Signals were detected using the Clarity ECL solution (Bio-Rad). The monoclonal antibody to RpoB, the beta subunit of RNA polymerase, was purchased from Biolegend (RpoB, Product # 663905). The polyclonal antibody to Hcp was custom-made by Shanghai Youlong Biotech. The HRP-linked secondary antibodies were purchased from ZSGB-Bio (Product # ZB-2305 (mouse) and # ZB-2301 (rabbit)). The Hcp antibody was used at 1:10000 dilution, while others at 1:20000 dilution.
RNA sample preparation and extraction
For transcriptome analysis of E. coli with or without Mg2+, exponential-phase-growing E. coli cells were collected and transferred onto LB plates with or without 0.3 mM Mg2+ for 30 min prior to RNA extraction. For transcriptome analysis of E. coli competed with V. cholerae, killer and prey strains were grown in LB overnight. Killer strains were then sub-cultured to OD600~1. Killer and prey cells were mixed at a ratio of 10:1 and co-incubated on appropriate LB plates with/without cations. A pilot time-course experiment was performed by monitoring E. coli survival during competition and the following time points prior to substantial cellular death of E. coli were established, 1.5 h co-incubation for RNA extraction in the presence of Ca2+ and 3 h in the presence of Mg2+.
For RNA extraction, cells were retrieved from the plate surface and resuspended in 800 μL 1× lysis buffer (1% [w/v] SDS, 2 mM EDTA) by vortex for 1 min. Then 800 μL prewarmed hot acidic phenol (65 °C) was added and mixed by inverting immediately. Tubes were incubated at 65 °C for 5 min with mixing briefly every 1 min. After putting on ice for 10 min, the mixture was centrifuged at 13,000 × g for 2 min. The top supernatant was carefully transferred to a new tube and an equal-volume of absolute ethanol was added. Then the crude RNA was purified by RNA prep Pure Cell/Bacteria Kit (TIANGEN, Product #DP430) and genomic DNA was removed by DNase I (NEB, Product B0303S) treatment at 37 °C for 30 min. After DNase I treatment, RNA samples were then purified with the RNA clean Kit (TIANGEN, Product #DP412). Purified RNA was electrophoresed on 1% [w/v] agarose gel to monitor the integrity and contaminants.
Transcriptome analysis
RNA-seq library preparation and sequencing were performed by Novogene. Briefly, rRNA was removed from total RNA samples by using probes. Then obtained mRNA was fragmented by divalent cations. The first-strand cDNA was synthesized by M-MuLV Reverse Transcriptase using random hexamers as primers. The RNA strand was degraded by RNase H. The second strand of cDNA was synthesized using dUTP to replace dTTP in the dNTP mixture. The purified double-stranded cDNA was end-repaired, added with an A and ligated to the sequencing adapter. USER enzyme (NEB, USA) was used to degrade the second strand of cDNA containing U. After using AMPure XP beads to screen cDNA with 370~420 bp and PCR amplification of these fragments, the final library was obtained with another cycle of AMPure XP beads purification. The clustering of the index-coded samples was performed on a cBot Cluster Generation System following the manufacturer’s instructions, and the sequencing was performed using the HiSeq (Illumina) platform with pair-end 150 base reads. Raw data were filtered according to the following standards: (1) removing reads with unidentified nucleotides (N); (2) removing reads with low sequencing quality (>50% bases having Phred quality scores of ≤20); (3) removing reads with the adapter. The obtained clean data were used for downstream analysis. Bowtie2-2.2.3 was used to build an index of the reference genome and align clean reads to the reference genome. The gene expression level was calculated and further normalized by HTSeq v0.6.1. FPKM, fragments per kilobase of transcript sequence per millions base pairs sequenced, was used to demonstrate gene expression level here. Differential expression analysis of each two conditions was performed by DESeq R package (1.18.0). The resulting p values were adjusted using the Benjamini and Hochberg’s approach for controlling the false discovery rate. Differential expression genes (DEGs) were identified by setting cut-off value as Log2 fold change > 1, p value < 0.05. The bioinformatics analysis of RNA-seq results was performed and plotted by R and GraphPad Prism.
qRT-PCR analysis
Primers for qPCR were designed by PerlPrimer. The 16S rRNA gene was used as the reference. Reverse transcription was done using PrimeScript RT reagent Kit with gDNA Eraser (Perfect Real Time) (Takara, #RR047A). qPCR reaction was prepared by TB Green Premix Ex Taq (Tli RNase H Plus) (Takara, #RR420A) and detected by CFX Connect Real-Time PCR Detection System (BIO-RAD, #1855201). Analysis of relative gene expression was calculated using the 2−∆∆CT method. Each sample was measured in triplicate and repeated at least three times.
Infant mouse competition assay
In vivo competition assay was performed as previously described with some modifications [71]. Briefly, 4–5-day-old BALB/c infant mice from Guangdong Medical Laboratory Animal Center were kept at a constant temperature of 28 °C for 6 h since received. V. cholerae strains were cultured to OD600~1 and diluted to 108 CFU/mL with sterile LB, killer (V. cholerae the tseH+ or 4effc strain) and prey (V. cholerae the ∆tsiH, ∆lacZ strain) cells were mixed with 1:1. Each baby mouse was gavaged with 50 µL mixture (25 μL killer cells + 25 μL prey cells). After 24 h, mice were sacrificed and the small intestines were isolated and homogenized in 1 mL sterile PBS. A tenfold serial dilution was plated on LB plates with appropriated antibiotics and 40 μg/mL X-Gal. After incubation at 37 °C overnight, killer and prey cells were numerated by blue and white colonies in the plates and the prey/killer ratio was calculated.
Toxicity assay
For TseH toxicity assay in E. coli, plasmid encoding arabinose-inducible Tat-tagged (periplasm-directed) TseH or TseHH64A was electroporated into E. coli strains and maintained on 0.4% [w/v] glucose to repress expression. Fresh colonies were resuspended in LB medium with 0.4% [w/v] glucose and sub-cultured to OD600~1. Cells were collected and resuspended in LB with 0.1% [w/v] arabinose followed by 1 h induction. The survival of E. coli before and after induction was enumerated by tenfold serial dilutions on LB plates containing 0.4% [w/v] glucose and appropriate antibiotics.
For VasX toxicity assay in PAO1, overnight cells carrying pPSV37 constructs were grown in LB with appropriate antibiotics and 0.2% [w/v] glucose at 37 °C. Cells were then collected and resuspended in fresh LB. A serial dilution was plated on LB plates containing 0.1 mM, 1 mM IPTG or 0.2% [w/v] glucose with antibiotics as indicated.
Data availability
The data that support the findings of this study are available within the paper or available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by funding from National Key R&D Program of China (2020YFA0907200), National Natural Science Foundation of China (31770082 and 32030001), Shenzhen Science and Technology Program (JCYJ20210324115611032 and KQTD20200909113758004), Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, and Canada Research Chair program. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.
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TD conceived the project. MT performed most of the experiment and data analysis. TP, ZW, and HL performed experiments. QX and YF performed animal infection. XW contributed to RNA-seq data analysis. MT prepared the first draft. TD contributed to the revision with assistance from MT and TP.
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Tang, MX., Pei, TT., Xiang, Q. et al. Abiotic factors modulate interspecies competition mediated by the type VI secretion system effectors in Vibrio cholerae. ISME J 16, 1765–1775 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-022-01228-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-022-01228-5