ABSTRACT
Bacteria use surface appendages called type IV pili to perform diverse activities including DNA uptake, twitching motility, and attachment to surfaces. Dynamic extension and retraction of pili is often required for these activities, but the stimuli that regulate these dynamics remain poorly characterized. To study this question, we use the bacterial pathogen Vibrio cholerae, which uses mannose-sensitive hemagglutinin (MSHA) pili to attach to surfaces in aquatic environments as the first step in biofilm formation. Here, we find that V. cholerae cells retract MSHA pili and detach from a surface in microaerobic conditions. This response is dependent on the phosphodiesterase CdpA, which decreases intracellular levels of cyclic-di-GMP (c-di-GMP) under microaerobic conditions to induce MSHA pilus retraction. CdpA contains a putative NO-sensing NosP domain, and we demonstrate that nitric oxide (NO) is necessary and sufficient to stimulate CdpA-dependent detachment. Thus, we hypothesize that microaerobic conditions result in endogenous production of NO (or an NO-like molecule) in V. cholerae. Together, these results describe a regulatory pathway that allows V. cholerae to rapidly abort biofilm formation. More broadly, these results show how environmental cues can be integrated into the complex regulatory pathways that control pilus dynamic activity and attachment in bacterial species.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.