12-Methyltetradecanoic acid, a branched-chain fatty acid, represses the extracellular production of surfactants required for swarming motility in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1.

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Authors
Category Primary study
JournalJapanese journal of infectious diseases
Year 2012
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is known to produce surfactants that are involved in its swarming motility behavior, such as rhamnolipids and their precursors-3-(3-hydroxyalkanoyloxy)-alkanoic acids (HAAs). In P. aeruginosa PAO1, swarming motility is inhibited by some fatty acids, including branched-chain fatty acids and unsaturated fatty acids. In the present study, addition of 12-methyltetradecanoic acid (12-MTA, anteiso-C15:0) to an agar medium markedly repressed surfactant activity in the extracellular fraction of a P. aeruginosa culture in a drop collapse assay. Further, an extracellular fraction of a culture of rhlA mutant P. aeruginosa, which did not produce both rhamnolipids and HAAs, showed a complete loss of surfactant activity and markedly reduced swarming activity. In contrast, an extracellular fraction of a culture of rhlB mutant P. aeruginosa, which produced HAAs but not rhamnolipids, showed moderate swarming activity and weak extracellular surfactant activity that was lost on the addition of 12-MTA to the agar medium. Expression of the rhlAB operon from the plasmid pMR2 restored normal swarming motility on 12-MTA-containing agar medium. Taken together, these findings indicate that 12-MTA reduced extracellular surfactant activity, thus resulting in a swarming defect in P. aeruginosa PAO1.
Epistemonikos ID: 9109b3a8e77a6fb7d299440a8f8bbca1a71e5fc1
First added on: Jun 03, 2021