In E. coli, Interrupting One Death Pathway Leads You Down Another
Interrupting One Death Pathway Leads You Down Another. PLoS
Biol 10(3): e1001278. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001278
In E. coli , Interrupting One Death Pathway Leads You Down Another
Richard Robinson 0
0 Freelance Science Writer , Sherborn, Massachusetts , United States of America
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You might think that organisms would
do well to just concentrate on staying alive,
and leave death to the fates, but in fact,
all eukaryotes have well-regulated
programmed cell death pathways built into
their genes, which help sculpt organs
during development and scuttle infected
cells before they get out of control.
Bacteria, too, have cell death mechanisms,
and, like so much of the bacterial world,
they are more varied than their eukaryotic
counterparts. In a new study in PLoS
Biology, Hanna Engelberg-Kulka and
colleagues describe a novel cell death
pathway in E. coli that is inhibited by a second,
and suggest that the two may serve
different functions in the life, and death,
of bacterial colonies.
One well-described bacterial death
pathway involves the mazEF operon. The
mazF gene encodes a stable toxin, which
would kill the bacterium, except that it is
cotranscribed with mazE, which encodes a
labile antitoxin. As long as the cell is in
good health, it stays that way. But if it
becomes too damaged to produce more
mazE antitoxin, the residual mazF will
trigger cell death. But what happens when
the mazEF system is disabled? This is the
question the authors set out to investigate.
In the best-known type of eukaryotic
programmed cell death, apoptosis, the cell
membrane becomes depolarized, which
can be detected by influx of a fluorescent
dye. In contrast, mazEF death does not
induce depolarization. But when the
authors mutated mazF to block the
pathway, and then subjected the bacteria to a
lethal dose of DNA-damaging toxin, the
bacterial cells still died, and in the process
their membranes depolarized, and the
cells became stained with dye. They
termed this alternative death pathway
apoptotic-like death (ALD). The same
shunting to ALD occurred when mazF
was left intact, but one or another of its
downstream targets was deleted,
indicating that disruption of any part of the
mazEF system was sufficient to trigger this
alternative pathway.
In bacteria, DNA damage triggers the
so-called SOS response, which switches on
a repair system. The response is mediated
by the protein RecA. Since DNA damage
also triggered ALD, the authors wondered
whether RecA might also be at work in the
ALD system. They showed that when
activated by DNA damage, the mazEF
system inhibited production of RecA, and
prevented activation of the ALD system.
In mazEF mutants, DNA damage (but not
other stressors) led to a rise in RecA
messenger RNA, triggering the ALD
system, depolarizing the membrane, and
killing the bacteria. But when they deleted
RecA, DNA damage in mazEF mutants no
longer induced membrane depolarization,
reducing cell death.
What does it matter which way the
bacterium dies? The authors suggest the
answer lies in one final observation, that a
quorum-sensing signal peptide called
extracellular death factor (EDF) was also
needed for mazEFs inhibition of ALD.
Quorum sensing is used by a population of
bacteria to coordinate behaviors, including
reproduction and stress response. When
EDF was absent, DNA damage led to
death by the ALD pathway, not the mazEF
pathway.
The functional difference between the
two pathways, the authors speculate, has
to do with the survivors. A small percent
of each colony lives through the crisis
triggered by the DNA-damaging toxins.
They suggest that, through the mechanism
of quorum sensing, the mazEF system is
cell-density dependent, and ensures that,
in a crisis, enough bacteria die off to
ensure a plenitude of bacterial raw
materials in the environment for those that
survive. The ALD pathway, in contrast,
has no density dependence, and may serve
as a backup system in the event the mazEF
system fails.
It is also possible, they suggest, that the
ALD system ensures that bacteria that
have lost their good-for-the-community
mazEF death response will nonetheless die
off, preventing cheaters from exploiting
the resources of their neighbors. The
genetic basis of altruism is a controversial
topic in evolution, and these results may
provide new insights into how such a
system can evolve.
Erental A, Sharon I, Engelberg-Kulka H
(2012) Two Programmed Cell Death Systems
in Escherichia coli: An Apoptotic-Like Death Is
Inhibited by the mazEF-Mediated Death
Pathway. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001281
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Competing Interests: The author has declared that no competing interests exist.
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