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Quorum sensing

In biology, quorum sensing or quorum signaling (QS)[1] is the ability to detect and respond to cell population density by gene regulation. Quorum sensing is a type of cellular signaling, and more specifically can be considered a type of paracrine signaling. However, it also contains traits of both autocrine signaling: a cell produces both the autoinducer molecule and the receptor for the autoinducer.[2] As one example, QS enables bacteria to restrict the expression of specific genes to the high cell densities at which the resulting phenotypes will be most beneficial, especially for phenotypes that would be ineffective at low cell densities and therefore too energetically costly to express.[3] Many species of bacteria use quorum sensing to coordinate gene expression according to the density of their local population. In a similar fashion, some social insects use quorum sensing to determine where to nest. Quorum sensing in pathogenic bacteria activates host immune signaling and prolongs host survival, by limiting the bacterial intake of nutrients, such as tryptophan, which further is converted to serotonin.[4] As such, quorum sensing allows a commensal interaction between host and pathogenic bacteria.[4] Quorum sensing may also be useful for cancer cell communications.[5]

In addition to its function in biological systems, quorum sensing has several useful applications for computing and robotics. In general, quorum sensing can function as a decision-making process in any decentralized system in which the components have: (a) a means of assessing the number of other components they interact with and (b) a standard response once a threshold number of components is detected.

Discovery edit

The first observations of an autoinducer-controlled phenotype in bacteria were reported in 1970, by Kenneth Nealson, Terry Platt, and J. Woodland Hastings,[6] who observed what they described as a conditioning of the medium in which they had grown the bioluminescent marine bacterium Aliivibrio fischeri.[7] These bacteria did not synthesize luciferase—and therefore did not luminesce—in freshly inoculated culture but only after the bacterial population had increased significantly. Because they attributed this conditioning of the medium to the growing population of cells itself, they referred to the phenomenon as autoinduction.[6][8][7] In 1994, after study of the autoinduction phenomenon had expanded into several additional bacteria, the term "quorum sensing" was coined in a review by W. Claiborne Fuqua, Stephen C. Winans, and E. Peter Greenberg.[9]

Bacteria edit

 
Quorum sensing of gram-negative cell
 
Gram-positive bacteria quorum sensing

Some of the best-known examples of quorum sensing come from studies of bacteria. Bacteria use quorum sensing to regulate certain phenotype expressions, which in turn, coordinate their behaviours. Some common phenotypes include biofilm formation, virulence factor expression, and motility. Certain bacteria are able to use quorum sensing to regulate bioluminescence, nitrogen fixation and sporulation.[10]

The quorum-sensing function is based on the local density of the bacterial population in the immediate environment.[11] It can occur within a single bacterial species, as well as between diverse species. Both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria use quorum sensing, but there are some major differences in their mechanisms.[12]

Mechanism edit

For the bacteria to use quorum sensing constitutively, they must possess three abilities: secretion of a signaling molecule, secretion of an autoinducer (to detect the change in concentration of signaling molecules), and regulation of gene transcription as a response.[10] This process is highly dependent on the diffusion mechanism of the signaling molecules. QS signaling molecules are usually secreted at a low level by individual bacteria. At low cell density, the molecules may just diffuse away. At high cell density, the local concentration of signaling molecules may exceed its threshold level, and trigger changes in gene expression.[12]

Gram-positive bacteria edit

Gram-positive bacteria use autoinducing peptides (AIP) as their autoinducers.[13]

When gram-positive bacteria detect high concentration of AIPs in their environment, that happens by way of AIPs binding to a receptor to activate a kinase. The kinase phosphorylates a transcription factor, which regulates gene transcription. This is called a two-component system.

Another possible mechanism is that AIP is transported into the cytosol, and binds directly to a transcription factor to initiate or inhibit transcription.[13]

Gram-negative bacteria edit

Gram-negative bacteria produce N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHL) as their signaling molecule.[13] Usually AHLs do not need additional processing, and bind directly to transcription factors to regulate gene expression.[12]

Some gram-negative bacteria may use the two-component system as well.[13]

Examples edit

Aliivibrio fischeri edit

The bioluminescent bacterium A. fischeri is the first organism in which QS was observed. It lives as a mutualistic symbiont in the photophore (or light-producing organ) of the Hawaiian bobtail squid. When A. fischeri cells are free-living (or planktonic), the autoinducer is at low concentration, and, thus, cells do not show luminescence. However, when the population reaches the threshold in the photophore (about 1011 cells/ml), transcription of luciferase is induced, leading to bioluminescence. In A. fischeri bioluminescence is regulated by AHLs (N-acyl-homoserine lactones) which is a product of the LuxI gene whose transcription is regulated by the LuxR activator. LuxR works only when AHLs binds to the LuxR.

Curvibacter sp. edit

Curvibacter sp. is a gram-negative curved rod-formed bacterium which is the main colonizer of the epithelial cell surfaces of the early branching metazoan Hydra vulgaris.[14][15] Sequencing the complete genome uncovered a circular chromosome (4.37 Mb), a plasmid (16.5 kb), and two operons coding each for an AHL (N-acyl-homoserine lactone) synthase (curI1 and curI2) and an AHL receptor (curR1 and curR2).[15] Moreover, a study showed that these host associated Curvibacter bacteria produce a broad spectrum of AHL, explaining the presence of those operons.[15] As mentioned before, AHL are the quorum sensing molecules of gram-negative bacteria, which means Curvibacter has a quorum sensing activity.

Even though their function in host-microbe interaction is largely unknown, Curvibacter quorum-sensing signals are relevant for host-microbe interactions.[15] Indeed, due to the oxidoreductase activity of Hydra, there is a modification of AHL signalling molecules (3-oxo-homoserine lactone into 3-hydroxy-homoserine lactone) which leads to a different host-microbe interaction. On one hand, a phenotypic switch of the colonizer Curvibacter takes place. The most likely explanation is that the binding of 3-oxo-HSL and 3-hydroxy-HSL causes different conformational changes in the AHL receptors curR1 and curR2. As a result, there is a different DNA-binding motif affinity and thereby different target genes are activated.[15] On the other hand, this switch modifies its ability to colonize the epithelial cell surfaces of Hydra vulgaris.[15] Indeed, one explanation is that with a 3-oxo-HSL quorum-sensing signal, there is an up-regulation of flagellar assembly. Yet, flagellin, the main protein component of flagella, can act as an immunomodulator and activate the innate immune response in Hydra. Therefore, bacteria have less chance to evade the immune system and to colonize host tissues.[15] Another explanation is that 3-hydroxy-HSL induces carbon metabolism and fatty acid degradation genes in Hydra. This allows the bacterial metabolism to adjust itself to the host growth conditions, which is essential for the colonization of the ectodermal mucus layer of Hydrae.[15]

Escherichia coli edit

In the gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli (E. coli), cell division may be partially regulated by AI-2-mediated quorum sensing. This species uses AI-2, which is produced and processed by the lsr operon. Part of it encodes an ABC transporter, which imports AI-2 into the cells during the early stationary (latent) phase of growth. AI-2 is then phosphorylated by the LsrK kinase, and the newly produced phospho-AI-2 can be either internalized or used to suppress LsrR, a repressor of the lsr operon (thereby activating the operon). Transcription of the lsr operon is also thought to be inhibited by dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) through its competitive binding to LsrR. Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate has also been shown to inhibit the lsr operon through cAMP-CAPK-mediated inhibition. This explains why, when grown with glucose, E. coli will lose the ability to internalize AI-2 (because of catabolite repression). When grown normally, AI-2 presence is transient.

E. coli and Salmonella enterica do not produce AHL signals commonly found in other gram-negative bacteria. However, they have a receptor that detects AHLs from other bacteria and change their gene expression in accordance with the presence of other "quorate" populations of gram-negative bacteria.[16]

Salmonella enterica edit

Salmonella encodes a LuxR homolog, SdiA, but does not encode an AHL synthase. SdiA detects AHLs produced by other species of bacteria including Aeromonas hydrophila, Hafnia alvei, and Yersinia enterocolitica.[17] When AHL is detected, SdiA regulates the rck operon on the Salmonella virulence plasmid (pefI-srgD-srgA-srgB-rck-srgC) and a single gene horizontal acquisition in the chromosome srgE.[18][19] Salmonella does not detect AHL when passing through the gastrointestinal tracts of several animal species, suggesting that the normal microbiota does not produce AHLs. However, SdiA does become activated when Salmonella transits through turtles colonized with Aeromonas hydrophila or mice infected with Yersinia enterocolitica.[20][21] Therefore, Salmonella appears to use SdiA to detect the AHL production of other pathogens rather than the normal gut flora.

Pseudomonas aeruginosa edit

The environmental bacterium and opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa uses quorum sensing to coordinate the formation of biofilm, swarming motility, exopolysaccharide production, virulence, and cell aggregation.[22] These bacteria can grow within a host without harming it until they reach a threshold concentration. Then they become aggressive, developing to the point at which their numbers are sufficient to overcome the host's immune system, and form a biofilm, leading to disease within the host as the biofilm is a protective layer encasing the bacterial population[citation needed]. The relative ease of growth, handling, and genetic manipulation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa has lent much research effort to the quorum sensing circuits of this relatively common bacterium. Quorum sensing in Pseudomonas aeruginosa typically encompasses two complete AHL synthase-receptor circuits, LasI-LasR and RhlI-RhlR, as well as the orphan receptor-regulator QscR, which is also activated by the LasI-generated signal.[23] Together, the multiple AHL quorum sensing circuits of Pseudomonas aeruginosa influence regulation of hundreds of genes.

Another form of gene regulation that allows the bacteria to rapidly adapt to surrounding changes is through environmental signaling. Recent studies have discovered that anaerobiosis can significantly impact the major regulatory circuit of quorum sensing. This important link between quorum sensing and anaerobiosis has a significant impact on the production of virulence factors of this organism.[24] There is hope among some humans that the therapeutic enzymatic degradation of the signaling molecules will be possible when treating illness caused by biofilms, and prevent the formation of such biofilms and possibly weaken established biofilms. Disrupting the signaling process in this way is called quorum sensing inhibition.[25]

Acinetobacter sp. edit

It has recently been found that Acinetobacter sp. also show quorum sensing activity. This bacterium, an emerging pathogen, produces AHLs.[26] Acinetobacter sp. shows both quorum sensing and quorum quenching activity. It produces AHLs and can also degrade the AHL molecules.[26]

Aeromonas sp. edit

This bacterium was previously considered a fish pathogen, but it has recently emerged as a human pathogen.[27] Aeromonas sp. have been isolated from various infected sites from patients (bile, blood, peritoneal fluid, pus, stool and urine). All isolates produced the two principal AHLs, N-butanoylhomoserine lactone (C4-HSL) and N-hexanoyl homoserine lactone (C6-HSL). It has been documented that Aeromonas sobria has produced C6-HSL and two additional AHLs with N-acyl side chain longer than C6.[28]

Yersinia edit

The YenR and YenI proteins produced by the gammaproteobacterium Yersinia enterocolitica are similar to Aliivibrio fischeri LuxR and LuxI.[29][30] YenR activates the expression of a small non-coding RNA, YenS. YenS inhibits YenI expression and acylhomoserine lactone production.[31] YenR/YenI/YenS are involved in the control of swimming and swarming motility.[30][31]

Molecules involved edit

Three-dimensional structures of proteins involved in quorum sensing were first published in 2001, when the crystal structures of three LuxS orthologs were determined by X-ray crystallography.[32] In 2002, the crystal structure of the receptor LuxP of Vibrio harveyi with its inducer AI-2 (which is one of the few biomolecules containing boron) bound to it was also determined.[33] Many bacterial species, including E. coli, an enteric bacterium and model organism for gram-negative bacteria, produce AI-2. A comparative genomic and phylogenetic analysis of 138 genomes of bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes found that "the LuxS enzyme required for AI-2 synthesis is widespread in bacteria, while the periplasmic binding protein LuxP is present only in Vibrio strains," leading to the conclusion that either "other organisms may use components different from the AI-2 signal transduction system of Vibrio strains to sense the signal of AI-2 or they do not have such a quorum sensing system at all."[34] Vibrio species utilize Qrr RNAs, small non-coding RNAs, that are activated by these autoinducers to target cell density master regulators. Farnesol is used by the fungus Candida albicans as a quorum sensing molecule that inhibits filamentation.[35]

A database of quorum-sensing peptides is available under the name Quorumpeps.[36][37]

Certain bacteria can produce enzymes called lactonases that can target and inactivate AHLs. Researchers have developed novel molecules which block the signalling receptors of bacteria ("Quorum quenching"). mBTL is a compound that has been shown to inhibit quorum sensing and decrease the amount of cell death by a significant amount.[38] Additionally, researchers are also examining the role of natural compounds (such as caffeine) as potential quorum sensing inhibitors.[39] Research in this area has been promising and could lead to the development of natural compounds as effective therapeutics.

Evolution edit

Sequence analysis edit

The majority of quorum sensing systems that fall under the "two-gene" (an autoinducer synthase coupled with a receptor molecule) paradigm as defined by the Vibrio fischeri system occur in the gram-negative Pseudomonadota. A comparison between the Pseudomonadota phylogeny as generated by 16S ribosomal RNA sequences and phylogenies of LuxI-, LuxR-, or LuxS-homologs shows a notably high level of global similarity. Overall, the quorum sensing genes seem to have diverged along with the Pseudomonadota phylum as a whole. This indicates that these quorum sensing systems are quite ancient, and arose very early in the Pseudomonadota lineage.[40][41]

Although examples of horizontal gene transfer are apparent in LuxI, LuxR, and LuxS phylogenies, they are relatively rare. This result is in line with the observation that quorum sensing genes tend to control the expression of a wide array of genes scattered throughout the bacterial chromosome. A recent acquisition by horizontal gene transfer would be unlikely to have integrated itself to this degree. Given that the majority of autoinducer–synthase/receptor pairs occur in tandem in bacterial genomes, it is also rare that they switch partners and so pairs tend to co-evolve.[41]

In quorum sensing genes of Gammaproteobacteria, which includes Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli, the LuxI/LuxR genes form a functional pair, with LuxI as the auto-inducer synthase and LuxR as the receptor. Gammaproteobacteria are unique in possessing quorum sensing genes, which, although functionally similar to the LuxI/LuxR genes, have a markedly divergent sequence.[41] This family of quorum-sensing homologs may have arisen in the Gammaproteobacteria ancestor, although the cause of their extreme sequence divergence yet maintenance of functional similarity has yet to be explained. In addition, species that employ multiple discrete quorum sensing systems are almost all members of the Gammaproteobacteria, and evidence of horizontal transfer of quorum sensing genes is most evident in this class.[40][41]

Interaction of quorum-sensing molecules with mammalian cells and its medical applications edit

Next to the potential antimicrobial functionality, quorum-sensing derived molecules, especially the peptides, are being investigated for their use in other therapeutic domains as well, including immunology, central nervous system disorders and oncology. Quorum-sensing peptides have been demonstrated to interact with cancer cells, as well as to permeate the blood–brain barrier reaching the brain parenchyma.[42][43][44]

Role of quorum sensing in biofilm development edit

When aggregated in high enough densities, some bacteria may form biofilms to protect themselves from biotic or abiotic threats. Biofilms may also serve to transport nutrients into the microbial community or transport toxins out by means of channels that permeate the extracellular polymeric matrix (like cellulose) that holds the cells together. Finally, biofilms are an ideal environment for horizontal gene transfer through either conjugation or environmental DNA (eDNA) that exists in the biofilm matrix.[45]

The process of biofilm development is often triggered by environmental signals, and bacteria are proven to require flagella to successfully approach a surface, adhere to it, and form the biofilm.[45] As cells either replicate or aggregate in a location, the concentration of autoinducers outside of the cells increases until a critical mass threshold is reached. At this point, it is energetically unfavorable for intracellular autoinducers to leave the cell and they bind to receptors and trigger a signaling cascade to initiate gene expression and begin secreting an extracellular polysaccharide to encase themselves inside.[46]

Archaea edit

Examples edit

Methanosaeta harundinacea 6Ac edit

Methanosaeta harundinacea 6Ac, a methanogenic archaeon, produces carboxylated acyl homoserine lactone compounds that facilitate the transition from growth as short cells to growth as filaments.[47]

Viruses edit

A mechanism involving arbitrium has recently been described in bacteriophages infecting several Bacillus species.[48][49] The viruses communicate with each other to ascertain their own density compared to potential hosts. They use this information to decide whether to enter a lytic or lysogenic life-cycle.[50]

Plants edit

QS is important to plant-pathogen interactions, and their study has also contributed to the QS field more generally.[51][7] The first X-ray crystallography results for some of the key proteins were those of Pantoea stewartii subsp. stewartii in maize/corn[52][7] and Agrobacterium tumefaciens, a crop pathogen with a wider range of hosts.[53][54][7] These interactions are facilitated by quorum-sensing molecules and play a major role in maintaining the pathogenicity of bacteria towards other hosts, such as humans. This mechanism can be understood by looking at the effects of N-Acyl homoserine lactone (AHL), one of the quorum sensing-signaling molecules in gram-negative bacteria, on plants. The model organism used is Arabidopsis thaliana.[55]

The role of AHLs having long carbon-chains (C12, C14), which have an unknown receptor mechanism, is less well understood than AHLs having short carbon-chains (C4, C6, C8), which are perceived by the G protein-coupled receptor. A phenomenon called "AHL priming", which is a dependent signalling pathway, enhanced our knowledge of long-chain AHLs. The role of quorum-sensing molecules was better explained according to three categories: host physiology–based impact of quorum sensing molecules; ecological effects; and cellular signaling. Calcium signalling and calmodulin have a large role in short-chain AHLs' response in Arabidopsis. Research was also conducted on barley and the crop called yam bean (Pachyrhizus erosus) that reveals the AHLs determining the detoxification enzymes called GST were found less in yam bean.[56]

Quorum sensing-based regulatory systems are necessary to plant-disease-causing bacteria. Looking towards developing new strategies based on plant-associated microbiomes, the aim of further study is to improve the quantity and quality of the food supply. Further research into this inter-kingdom communication also enhances the possibility of learning about quorum sensing in humans.[57]

Quorum quenching edit

Quorum quenching is the process of preventing quorum sensing by disrupting signalling.[58] This is achieved by inactivating signalling enzymes, by introducing molecules that mimic signalling molecules and block their receptors, by degrading signalling molecules themselves, or by a modification of the quorum sensing signals due to an enzyme activity.[15][58][59][60]

Inhibition edit

Closantel and triclosan are known inhibitors of quorum sensing enzymes.[61] Closantel induces aggregation of the histidine kinase sensor in two-component signalling. The latter disrupts the synthesis of a class of signalling molecules known as N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHLs) by blocking the enoyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) reductase.[61][62]

Mimicry edit

Two groups of well-known mimicking molecules include halogenated furanones, which mimic AHL molecules, and synthetic Al peptides (AIPs), which mimic naturally occurring AIPs. These groups inhibit receptors from binding substrate or decrease the concentration of receptors in the cell.[61] Furanones have also been found to act on AHL-dependant transcriptional activity, whereby the half life of the autoinducer-binding LuxR protein is significantly shortened.[63]

Degradation edit

Recently, a well-studied quorum quenching bacterial strain (KM1S) was isolated and its AHL degradation kinetics were studied using rapid resolution liquid chromatography (RRLC).[64] RRLC efficiently separates components of a mixture to a high degree of sensitivity, based on their affinities for different liquid phases.[65] It was found that the genome of this strain encoded an inactivation enzyme with distinct motifs targeting the degradation of AHLs.[64]

Modifications edit

As mentioned before, N-acyl-homoserine lactones (AHL) are the quorum sensing signaling molecules of the gram-negative bacteria. However, these molecules may have different functional groups on their acyl chain, and also a different length of acyl chain. Therefore, there exist many different AHL signaling molecules, for example, 3-oxododecanoyl-L-homoserine lactone (3OC12-HSL) or 3-hydroxydodecanoyl-L-homoserine lactone (3OHC12-HSL). The modification of those quorum sensing (QS) signaling molecules is another sort of quorum quenching. This can be carried out by an oxidoreductase activity.[15] As an example, we will discuss the interaction between a host, Hydra vulgaris, and the main colonizer of its epithelial cell surfaces, Curvibacter spp. Those bacteria produce 3-oxo-HSL quorum sensing molecules.[15] However, the oxidoreductase activity of the polyp Hydra is able to modify the 3-oxo-HSL into their 3-hydroxy-HSL counterparts.[15] We can characterize this as quorum quenching since there is an interference with quorum sensing molecules. In this case, the outcomes differ from simple QS inactivation: the host modification results in a phenotypic switch of Curvibacter, which modifies its ability to colonize the epithelial cell surfaces of H. vulgaris.[15]

Applications edit

Applications of quorum quenching that have been exploited by humans include the use of AHL-degrading bacteria in aquacultures to limit the spread of diseases in aquatic populations of fish, mollusks and crustaceans.[66] This technique has also been translated to agriculture, to restrict the spread of pathogenic bacteria that use quorum sensing in plants.[66][67] Anti-biofouling is another process that exploits quorum quenching bacteria to mediate the dissociation of unwanted biofilms aggregating on wet surfaces, such as medical devices, transportation infrastructure and water systems.[66][68] Quorum quenching is recently studied for the control of fouling and emerging contaminants in electro membrane bioreactors (eMBRs) for the advanced treatment of wastewater.[69] Extracts of several traditional medicinal herbs display quorum quenching acivity, and have potential antibacterial applications.[70][71]

Social insects edit

Social insect colonies are an excellent example of a decentralized system, because no individual is in charge of directing or making decisions for the colony. Several groups of social insects have been shown to use quorum sensing in a process that resembles collective decision-making.

Examples edit

Ants edit

Colonies of the ant Temnothorax albipennis nest in small crevices between rocks. When the rocks shift and the nest is broken up, these ants must quickly choose a new nest to move into. During the first phase of the decision-making process, a small portion of the workers leave the destroyed nest and search for new crevices. When one of these scout ants finds a potential nest, she assesses the quality of the crevice based on a variety of factors including the size of the interior, the number of openings (based on light level), and the presence or absence of dead ants.[72][73] The worker then returns to the destroyed nest, where she waits for a short period before recruiting other workers to follow her to the nest that she has found, using a process called tandem running. The waiting period is inversely related to the quality of the site; for instance, a worker that has found a poor site will wait longer than a worker that encountered a good site.[74] As the new recruits visit the potential nest site and make their own assessment of its quality, the number of ants visiting the crevice increases. During this stage, ants may be visiting many different potential nests. However, because of the differences in the waiting period, the number of ants in the best nest will tend to increase at the greatest rate. Eventually, the ants in this nest will sense that the rate at which they encounter other ants has exceeded a particular threshold, indicating that the quorum number has been reached.[75] Once the ants sense a quorum, they return to the destroyed nest and begin rapidly carrying the brood, queen, and fellow workers to the new nest. Scouts that are still tandem-running to other potential sites are also recruited to the new nest, and the entire colony moves. Thus, although no single worker may have visited and compared all of the available options, quorum sensing enables the colony as a whole to quickly make good decisions about where to move.

Honey bees edit

Honey bees (Apis mellifera) also use quorum sensing to make decisions about new nest sites. Large colonies reproduce through a process called swarming, in which the queen leaves the hive with a portion of the workers to form a new nest elsewhere. After leaving the nest, the workers form a swarm that hangs from a branch or overhanging structure. This swarm persists during the decision-making phase until a new nest site is chosen.

The quorum sensing process in honey bees is similar to the method used by Temnothorax ants in several ways. A small portion of the workers leave the swarm to search out new nest sites, and each worker assesses the quality of the cavity it finds. The worker then returns to the swarm and recruits other workers to her cavity using the honey bee waggle dance. However, instead of using a time delay, the number of dance repetitions the worker performs is dependent on the quality of the site. Workers that found poor nests stop dancing sooner, and can, therefore, be recruited to the better sites. Once the visitors to a new site sense that a quorum number (usually 10–20 bees) has been reached, they return to the swarm and begin using a new recruitment method called piping. This vibration signal causes the swarm to take off and fly to the new nest location. In an experimental test, this decision-making process enabled honey bee swarms to choose the best nest site in four out of five trials.[76][77]

Synthetic biology edit

Quorum sensing has been engineered using synthetic biological circuits in different systems. Examples include rewiring the AHL components to toxic genes to control population size in bacteria;[78] and constructing an auxin-based system to control population density in mammalian cells.[79] Synthetic quorum sensing circuits have been proposed to enable applications like controlling biofilms[80] or enabling drug delivery.[81] Quorum sensing based genetic circuits have been used to convert AI-2 signals to AI-1 and then subsequently use the AI-1 signal to alter bacterial growth rate, thereby changing the composition of a consortium.[82]

Computing and robotics edit

Quorum sensing can be a useful tool for improving the function of self-organizing networks such as the SECOAS (Self-Organizing Collegiate Sensor) environmental monitoring system. In this system, individual nodes sense that there is a population of other nodes with similar data to report. The population then nominates just one node to report the data, resulting in power savings.[83] Ad hoc wireless networks can also benefit from quorum sensing, by allowing the system to detect and respond to network conditions.[84]

Quorum sensing can also be used to coordinate the behavior of autonomous robot swarms. Using a process similar to that used by Temnothorax ants, robots can make rapid group decisions without the direction of a controller.[85]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Dedicated issue of Philosophical Transactions B on quorum sensing (2007). Some articles are freely available.
  • High citation review: Waters CM, Bassler BL (2005). "Quorum sensing: cell-to-cell communication in bacteria". Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology. 21: 319–346. doi:10.1146/annurev.cellbio.21.012704.131001. PMID 16212498.

External links edit

  • The Quorum Sensing Website
  • Cell-to-Cell Communication in Bacteria
  • Instant insight into quorum sensing from the Royal Society of Chemistry
  • Bonnie Bassler: Discovering bacteria's amazing communication system
  • Bonnie Bassler's seminar: "Cell-Cell Communication in Bacteria"

quorum, sensing, biology, quorum, sensing, quorum, signaling, ability, detect, respond, cell, population, density, gene, regulation, type, cellular, signaling, more, specifically, considered, type, paracrine, signaling, however, also, contains, traits, both, a. In biology quorum sensing or quorum signaling QS 1 is the ability to detect and respond to cell population density by gene regulation Quorum sensing is a type of cellular signaling and more specifically can be considered a type of paracrine signaling However it also contains traits of both autocrine signaling a cell produces both the autoinducer molecule and the receptor for the autoinducer 2 As one example QS enables bacteria to restrict the expression of specific genes to the high cell densities at which the resulting phenotypes will be most beneficial especially for phenotypes that would be ineffective at low cell densities and therefore too energetically costly to express 3 Many species of bacteria use quorum sensing to coordinate gene expression according to the density of their local population In a similar fashion some social insects use quorum sensing to determine where to nest Quorum sensing in pathogenic bacteria activates host immune signaling and prolongs host survival by limiting the bacterial intake of nutrients such as tryptophan which further is converted to serotonin 4 As such quorum sensing allows a commensal interaction between host and pathogenic bacteria 4 Quorum sensing may also be useful for cancer cell communications 5 In addition to its function in biological systems quorum sensing has several useful applications for computing and robotics In general quorum sensing can function as a decision making process in any decentralized system in which the components have a a means of assessing the number of other components they interact with and b a standard response once a threshold number of components is detected Contents 1 Discovery 2 Bacteria 2 1 Mechanism 2 1 1 Gram positive bacteria 2 1 2 Gram negative bacteria 2 2 Examples 2 2 1 Aliivibrio fischeri 2 2 2 Curvibacter sp 2 2 3 Escherichia coli 2 2 4 Salmonella enterica 2 2 5 Pseudomonas aeruginosa 2 2 6 Acinetobacter sp 2 2 7 Aeromonas sp 2 2 8 Yersinia 2 3 Molecules involved 2 4 Evolution 2 4 1 Sequence analysis 2 4 2 Interaction of quorum sensing molecules with mammalian cells and its medical applications 2 5 Role of quorum sensing in biofilm development 3 Archaea 3 1 Examples 3 1 1 Methanosaeta harundinacea 6Ac 4 Viruses 5 Plants 6 Quorum quenching 6 1 Inhibition 6 2 Mimicry 6 3 Degradation 6 4 Modifications 6 5 Applications 7 Social insects 7 1 Examples 7 1 1 Ants 7 1 2 Honey bees 8 Synthetic biology 9 Computing and robotics 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksDiscovery editThe first observations of an autoinducer controlled phenotype in bacteria were reported in 1970 by Kenneth Nealson Terry Platt and J Woodland Hastings 6 who observed what they described as a conditioning of the medium in which they had grown the bioluminescent marine bacterium Aliivibrio fischeri 7 These bacteria did not synthesize luciferase and therefore did not luminesce in freshly inoculated culture but only after the bacterial population had increased significantly Because they attributed this conditioning of the medium to the growing population of cells itself they referred to the phenomenon as autoinduction 6 8 7 In 1994 after study of the autoinduction phenomenon had expanded into several additional bacteria the term quorum sensing was coined in a review by W Claiborne Fuqua Stephen C Winans and E Peter Greenberg 9 Bacteria edit nbsp Quorum sensing of gram negative cell nbsp Gram positive bacteria quorum sensingSome of the best known examples of quorum sensing come from studies of bacteria Bacteria use quorum sensing to regulate certain phenotype expressions which in turn coordinate their behaviours Some common phenotypes include biofilm formation virulence factor expression and motility Certain bacteria are able to use quorum sensing to regulate bioluminescence nitrogen fixation and sporulation 10 The quorum sensing function is based on the local density of the bacterial population in the immediate environment 11 It can occur within a single bacterial species as well as between diverse species Both gram positive and gram negative bacteria use quorum sensing but there are some major differences in their mechanisms 12 Mechanism edit For the bacteria to use quorum sensing constitutively they must possess three abilities secretion of a signaling molecule secretion of an autoinducer to detect the change in concentration of signaling molecules and regulation of gene transcription as a response 10 This process is highly dependent on the diffusion mechanism of the signaling molecules QS signaling molecules are usually secreted at a low level by individual bacteria At low cell density the molecules may just diffuse away At high cell density the local concentration of signaling molecules may exceed its threshold level and trigger changes in gene expression 12 Gram positive bacteria edit Gram positive bacteria use autoinducing peptides AIP as their autoinducers 13 When gram positive bacteria detect high concentration of AIPs in their environment that happens by way of AIPs binding to a receptor to activate a kinase The kinase phosphorylates a transcription factor which regulates gene transcription This is called a two component system Another possible mechanism is that AIP is transported into the cytosol and binds directly to a transcription factor to initiate or inhibit transcription 13 Gram negative bacteria edit Gram negative bacteria produce N acyl homoserine lactones AHL as their signaling molecule 13 Usually AHLs do not need additional processing and bind directly to transcription factors to regulate gene expression 12 Some gram negative bacteria may use the two component system as well 13 Examples edit Aliivibrio fischeri edit The bioluminescent bacterium A fischeri is the first organism in which QS was observed It lives as a mutualistic symbiont in the photophore or light producing organ of the Hawaiian bobtail squid When A fischeri cells are free living or planktonic the autoinducer is at low concentration and thus cells do not show luminescence However when the population reaches the threshold in the photophore about 1011 cells ml transcription of luciferase is induced leading to bioluminescence In A fischeri bioluminescence is regulated by AHLs N acyl homoserine lactones which is a product of the LuxI gene whose transcription is regulated by the LuxR activator LuxR works only when AHLs binds to the LuxR Curvibacter sp edit Curvibacter sp is a gram negative curved rod formed bacterium which is the main colonizer of the epithelial cell surfaces of the early branching metazoan Hydra vulgaris 14 15 Sequencing the complete genome uncovered a circular chromosome 4 37 Mb a plasmid 16 5 kb and two operons coding each for an AHL N acyl homoserine lactone synthase curI1 and curI2 and an AHL receptor curR1 and curR2 15 Moreover a study showed that these host associated Curvibacter bacteria produce a broad spectrum of AHL explaining the presence of those operons 15 As mentioned before AHL are the quorum sensing molecules of gram negative bacteria which means Curvibacter has a quorum sensing activity Even though their function in host microbe interaction is largely unknown Curvibacter quorum sensing signals are relevant for host microbe interactions 15 Indeed due to the oxidoreductase activity of Hydra there is a modification of AHL signalling molecules 3 oxo homoserine lactone into 3 hydroxy homoserine lactone which leads to a different host microbe interaction On one hand a phenotypic switch of the colonizer Curvibacter takes place The most likely explanation is that the binding of 3 oxo HSL and 3 hydroxy HSL causes different conformational changes in the AHL receptors curR1 and curR2 As a result there is a different DNA binding motif affinity and thereby different target genes are activated 15 On the other hand this switch modifies its ability to colonize the epithelial cell surfaces of Hydra vulgaris 15 Indeed one explanation is that with a 3 oxo HSL quorum sensing signal there is an up regulation of flagellar assembly Yet flagellin the main protein component of flagella can act as an immunomodulator and activate the innate immune response in Hydra Therefore bacteria have less chance to evade the immune system and to colonize host tissues 15 Another explanation is that 3 hydroxy HSL induces carbon metabolism and fatty acid degradation genes in Hydra This allows the bacterial metabolism to adjust itself to the host growth conditions which is essential for the colonization of the ectodermal mucus layer of Hydrae 15 Escherichia coli edit In the gram negative bacterium Escherichia coli E coli cell division may be partially regulated by AI 2 mediated quorum sensing This species uses AI 2 which is produced and processed by the lsr operon Part of it encodes an ABC transporter which imports AI 2 into the cells during the early stationary latent phase of growth AI 2 is then phosphorylated by the LsrK kinase and the newly produced phospho AI 2 can be either internalized or used to suppress LsrR a repressor of the lsr operon thereby activating the operon Transcription of the lsr operon is also thought to be inhibited by dihydroxyacetone phosphate DHAP through its competitive binding to LsrR Glyceraldehyde 3 phosphate has also been shown to inhibit the lsr operon through cAMP CAPK mediated inhibition This explains why when grown with glucose E coli will lose the ability to internalize AI 2 because of catabolite repression When grown normally AI 2 presence is transient E coli and Salmonella enterica do not produce AHL signals commonly found in other gram negative bacteria However they have a receptor that detects AHLs from other bacteria and change their gene expression in accordance with the presence of other quorate populations of gram negative bacteria 16 Salmonella enterica edit Salmonella encodes a LuxR homolog SdiA but does not encode an AHL synthase SdiA detects AHLs produced by other species of bacteria including Aeromonas hydrophila Hafnia alvei and Yersinia enterocolitica 17 When AHL is detected SdiA regulates the rck operon on the Salmonella virulence plasmid pefI srgD srgA srgB rck srgC and a single gene horizontal acquisition in the chromosome srgE 18 19 Salmonella does not detect AHL when passing through the gastrointestinal tracts of several animal species suggesting that the normal microbiota does not produce AHLs However SdiA does become activated when Salmonella transits through turtles colonized with Aeromonas hydrophila or mice infected with Yersinia enterocolitica 20 21 Therefore Salmonella appears to use SdiA to detect the AHL production of other pathogens rather than the normal gut flora Pseudomonas aeruginosa edit The environmental bacterium and opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa uses quorum sensing to coordinate the formation of biofilm swarming motility exopolysaccharide production virulence and cell aggregation 22 These bacteria can grow within a host without harming it until they reach a threshold concentration Then they become aggressive developing to the point at which their numbers are sufficient to overcome the host s immune system and form a biofilm leading to disease within the host as the biofilm is a protective layer encasing the bacterial population citation needed The relative ease of growth handling and genetic manipulation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa has lent much research effort to the quorum sensing circuits of this relatively common bacterium Quorum sensing in Pseudomonas aeruginosa typically encompasses two complete AHL synthase receptor circuits LasI LasR and RhlI RhlR as well as the orphan receptor regulator QscR which is also activated by the LasI generated signal 23 Together the multiple AHL quorum sensing circuits of Pseudomonas aeruginosa influence regulation of hundreds of genes Another form of gene regulation that allows the bacteria to rapidly adapt to surrounding changes is through environmental signaling Recent studies have discovered that anaerobiosis can significantly impact the major regulatory circuit of quorum sensing This important link between quorum sensing and anaerobiosis has a significant impact on the production of virulence factors of this organism 24 There is hope among some humans that the therapeutic enzymatic degradation of the signaling molecules will be possible when treating illness caused by biofilms and prevent the formation of such biofilms and possibly weaken established biofilms Disrupting the signaling process in this way is called quorum sensing inhibition 25 Acinetobacter sp edit It has recently been found that Acinetobacter sp also show quorum sensing activity This bacterium an emerging pathogen produces AHLs 26 Acinetobacter sp shows both quorum sensing and quorum quenching activity It produces AHLs and can also degrade the AHL molecules 26 Aeromonas sp edit This bacterium was previously considered a fish pathogen but it has recently emerged as a human pathogen 27 Aeromonas sp have been isolated from various infected sites from patients bile blood peritoneal fluid pus stool and urine All isolates produced the two principal AHLs N butanoylhomoserine lactone C4 HSL and N hexanoyl homoserine lactone C6 HSL It has been documented that Aeromonas sobria has produced C6 HSL and two additional AHLs with N acyl side chain longer than C6 28 Yersinia edit The YenR and YenI proteins produced by the gammaproteobacterium Yersinia enterocolitica are similar to Aliivibrio fischeri LuxR and LuxI 29 30 YenR activates the expression of a small non coding RNA YenS YenS inhibits YenI expression and acylhomoserine lactone production 31 YenR YenI YenS are involved in the control of swimming and swarming motility 30 31 Molecules involved edit Three dimensional structures of proteins involved in quorum sensing were first published in 2001 when the crystal structures of three LuxS orthologs were determined by X ray crystallography 32 In 2002 the crystal structure of the receptor LuxP of Vibrio harveyi with its inducer AI 2 which is one of the few biomolecules containing boron bound to it was also determined 33 Many bacterial species including E coli an enteric bacterium and model organism for gram negative bacteria produce AI 2 A comparative genomic and phylogenetic analysis of 138 genomes of bacteria archaea and eukaryotes found that the LuxS enzyme required for AI 2 synthesis is widespread in bacteria while the periplasmic binding protein LuxP is present only in Vibrio strains leading to the conclusion that either other organisms may use components different from the AI 2 signal transduction system of Vibrio strains to sense the signal of AI 2 or they do not have such a quorum sensing system at all 34 Vibrio species utilize Qrr RNAs small non coding RNAs that are activated by these autoinducers to target cell density master regulators Farnesol is used by the fungus Candida albicans as a quorum sensing molecule that inhibits filamentation 35 A database of quorum sensing peptides is available under the name Quorumpeps 36 37 Certain bacteria can produce enzymes called lactonases that can target and inactivate AHLs Researchers have developed novel molecules which block the signalling receptors of bacteria Quorum quenching mBTL is a compound that has been shown to inhibit quorum sensing and decrease the amount of cell death by a significant amount 38 Additionally researchers are also examining the role of natural compounds such as caffeine as potential quorum sensing inhibitors 39 Research in this area has been promising and could lead to the development of natural compounds as effective therapeutics Evolution edit Sequence analysis edit The majority of quorum sensing systems that fall under the two gene an autoinducer synthase coupled with a receptor molecule paradigm as defined by the Vibrio fischeri system occur in the gram negative Pseudomonadota A comparison between the Pseudomonadota phylogeny as generated by 16S ribosomal RNA sequences and phylogenies of LuxI LuxR or LuxS homologs shows a notably high level of global similarity Overall the quorum sensing genes seem to have diverged along with the Pseudomonadota phylum as a whole This indicates that these quorum sensing systems are quite ancient and arose very early in the Pseudomonadota lineage 40 41 Although examples of horizontal gene transfer are apparent in LuxI LuxR and LuxS phylogenies they are relatively rare This result is in line with the observation that quorum sensing genes tend to control the expression of a wide array of genes scattered throughout the bacterial chromosome A recent acquisition by horizontal gene transfer would be unlikely to have integrated itself to this degree Given that the majority of autoinducer synthase receptor pairs occur in tandem in bacterial genomes it is also rare that they switch partners and so pairs tend to co evolve 41 In quorum sensing genes of Gammaproteobacteria which includes Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli the LuxI LuxR genes form a functional pair with LuxI as the auto inducer synthase and LuxR as the receptor Gammaproteobacteria are unique in possessing quorum sensing genes which although functionally similar to the LuxI LuxR genes have a markedly divergent sequence 41 This family of quorum sensing homologs may have arisen in the Gammaproteobacteria ancestor although the cause of their extreme sequence divergence yet maintenance of functional similarity has yet to be explained In addition species that employ multiple discrete quorum sensing systems are almost all members of the Gammaproteobacteria and evidence of horizontal transfer of quorum sensing genes is most evident in this class 40 41 Interaction of quorum sensing molecules with mammalian cells and its medical applications edit Next to the potential antimicrobial functionality quorum sensing derived molecules especially the peptides are being investigated for their use in other therapeutic domains as well including immunology central nervous system disorders and oncology Quorum sensing peptides have been demonstrated to interact with cancer cells as well as to permeate the blood brain barrier reaching the brain parenchyma 42 43 44 Role of quorum sensing in biofilm development edit When aggregated in high enough densities some bacteria may form biofilms to protect themselves from biotic or abiotic threats Biofilms may also serve to transport nutrients into the microbial community or transport toxins out by means of channels that permeate the extracellular polymeric matrix like cellulose that holds the cells together Finally biofilms are an ideal environment for horizontal gene transfer through either conjugation or environmental DNA eDNA that exists in the biofilm matrix 45 The process of biofilm development is often triggered by environmental signals and bacteria are proven to require flagella to successfully approach a surface adhere to it and form the biofilm 45 As cells either replicate or aggregate in a location the concentration of autoinducers outside of the cells increases until a critical mass threshold is reached At this point it is energetically unfavorable for intracellular autoinducers to leave the cell and they bind to receptors and trigger a signaling cascade to initiate gene expression and begin secreting an extracellular polysaccharide to encase themselves inside 46 Archaea editExamples edit Methanosaeta harundinacea 6Ac edit Methanosaeta harundinacea 6Ac a methanogenic archaeon produces carboxylated acyl homoserine lactone compounds that facilitate the transition from growth as short cells to growth as filaments 47 Viruses editA mechanism involving arbitrium has recently been described in bacteriophages infecting several Bacillus species 48 49 The viruses communicate with each other to ascertain their own density compared to potential hosts They use this information to decide whether to enter a lytic or lysogenic life cycle 50 Plants editQS is important to plant pathogen interactions and their study has also contributed to the QS field more generally 51 7 The first X ray crystallography results for some of the key proteins were those of Pantoea stewartii subsp stewartii in maize corn 52 7 and Agrobacterium tumefaciens a crop pathogen with a wider range of hosts 53 54 7 These interactions are facilitated by quorum sensing molecules and play a major role in maintaining the pathogenicity of bacteria towards other hosts such as humans This mechanism can be understood by looking at the effects of N Acyl homoserine lactone AHL one of the quorum sensing signaling molecules in gram negative bacteria on plants The model organism used is Arabidopsis thaliana 55 The role of AHLs having long carbon chains C12 C14 which have an unknown receptor mechanism is less well understood than AHLs having short carbon chains C4 C6 C8 which are perceived by the G protein coupled receptor A phenomenon called AHL priming which is a dependent signalling pathway enhanced our knowledge of long chain AHLs The role of quorum sensing molecules was better explained according to three categories host physiology based impact of quorum sensing molecules ecological effects and cellular signaling Calcium signalling and calmodulin have a large role in short chain AHLs response in Arabidopsis Research was also conducted on barley and the crop called yam bean Pachyrhizus erosus that reveals the AHLs determining the detoxification enzymes called GST were found less in yam bean 56 Quorum sensing based regulatory systems are necessary to plant disease causing bacteria Looking towards developing new strategies based on plant associated microbiomes the aim of further study is to improve the quantity and quality of the food supply Further research into this inter kingdom communication also enhances the possibility of learning about quorum sensing in humans 57 Quorum quenching editQuorum quenching is the process of preventing quorum sensing by disrupting signalling 58 This is achieved by inactivating signalling enzymes by introducing molecules that mimic signalling molecules and block their receptors by degrading signalling molecules themselves or by a modification of the quorum sensing signals due to an enzyme activity 15 58 59 60 Inhibition edit Closantel and triclosan are known inhibitors of quorum sensing enzymes 61 Closantel induces aggregation of the histidine kinase sensor in two component signalling The latter disrupts the synthesis of a class of signalling molecules known as N acyl homoserine lactones AHLs by blocking the enoyl acyl carrier protein ACP reductase 61 62 Mimicry edit Two groups of well known mimicking molecules include halogenated furanones which mimic AHL molecules and synthetic Al peptides AIPs which mimic naturally occurring AIPs These groups inhibit receptors from binding substrate or decrease the concentration of receptors in the cell 61 Furanones have also been found to act on AHL dependant transcriptional activity whereby the half life of the autoinducer binding LuxR protein is significantly shortened 63 Degradation edit Recently a well studied quorum quenching bacterial strain KM1S was isolated and its AHL degradation kinetics were studied using rapid resolution liquid chromatography RRLC 64 RRLC efficiently separates components of a mixture to a high degree of sensitivity based on their affinities for different liquid phases 65 It was found that the genome of this strain encoded an inactivation enzyme with distinct motifs targeting the degradation of AHLs 64 Modifications edit As mentioned before N acyl homoserine lactones AHL are the quorum sensing signaling molecules of the gram negative bacteria However these molecules may have different functional groups on their acyl chain and also a different length of acyl chain Therefore there exist many different AHL signaling molecules for example 3 oxododecanoyl L homoserine lactone 3OC12 HSL or 3 hydroxydodecanoyl L homoserine lactone 3OHC12 HSL The modification of those quorum sensing QS signaling molecules is another sort of quorum quenching This can be carried out by an oxidoreductase activity 15 As an example we will discuss the interaction between a host Hydra vulgaris and the main colonizer of its epithelial cell surfaces Curvibacter spp Those bacteria produce 3 oxo HSL quorum sensing molecules 15 However the oxidoreductase activity of the polyp Hydra is able to modify the 3 oxo HSL into their 3 hydroxy HSL counterparts 15 We can characterize this as quorum quenching since there is an interference with quorum sensing molecules In this case the outcomes differ from simple QS inactivation the host modification results in a phenotypic switch of Curvibacter which modifies its ability to colonize the epithelial cell surfaces of H vulgaris 15 Applications edit Applications of quorum quenching that have been exploited by humans include the use of AHL degrading bacteria in aquacultures to limit the spread of diseases in aquatic populations of fish mollusks and crustaceans 66 This technique has also been translated to agriculture to restrict the spread of pathogenic bacteria that use quorum sensing in plants 66 67 Anti biofouling is another process that exploits quorum quenching bacteria to mediate the dissociation of unwanted biofilms aggregating on wet surfaces such as medical devices transportation infrastructure and water systems 66 68 Quorum quenching is recently studied for the control of fouling and emerging contaminants in electro membrane bioreactors eMBRs for the advanced treatment of wastewater 69 Extracts of several traditional medicinal herbs display quorum quenching acivity and have potential antibacterial applications 70 71 Social insects editSocial insect colonies are an excellent example of a decentralized system because no individual is in charge of directing or making decisions for the colony Several groups of social insects have been shown to use quorum sensing in a process that resembles collective decision making Examples edit Ants edit Colonies of the ant Temnothorax albipennis nest in small crevices between rocks When the rocks shift and the nest is broken up these ants must quickly choose a new nest to move into During the first phase of the decision making process a small portion of the workers leave the destroyed nest and search for new crevices When one of these scout ants finds a potential nest she assesses the quality of the crevice based on a variety of factors including the size of the interior the number of openings based on light level and the presence or absence of dead ants 72 73 The worker then returns to the destroyed nest where she waits for a short period before recruiting other workers to follow her to the nest that she has found using a process called tandem running The waiting period is inversely related to the quality of the site for instance a worker that has found a poor site will wait longer than a worker that encountered a good site 74 As the new recruits visit the potential nest site and make their own assessment of its quality the number of ants visiting the crevice increases During this stage ants may be visiting many different potential nests However because of the differences in the waiting period the number of ants in the best nest will tend to increase at the greatest rate Eventually the ants in this nest will sense that the rate at which they encounter other ants has exceeded a particular threshold indicating that the quorum number has been reached 75 Once the ants sense a quorum they return to the destroyed nest and begin rapidly carrying the brood queen and fellow workers to the new nest Scouts that are still tandem running to other potential sites are also recruited to the new nest and the entire colony moves Thus although no single worker may have visited and compared all of the available options quorum sensing enables the colony as a whole to quickly make good decisions about where to move Honey bees edit Honey bees Apis mellifera also use quorum sensing to make decisions about new nest sites Large colonies reproduce through a process called swarming in which the queen leaves the hive with a portion of the workers to form a new nest elsewhere After leaving the nest the workers form a swarm that hangs from a branch or overhanging structure This swarm persists during the decision making phase until a new nest site is chosen The quorum sensing process in honey bees is similar to the method used by Temnothorax ants in several ways A small portion of the workers leave the swarm to search out new nest sites and each worker assesses the quality of the cavity it finds The worker then returns to the swarm and recruits other workers to her cavity using the honey bee waggle dance However instead of using a time delay the number of dance repetitions the worker performs is dependent on the quality of the site Workers that found poor nests stop dancing sooner and can therefore be recruited to the better sites Once the visitors to a new site sense that a quorum number usually 10 20 bees has been reached they return to the swarm and begin using a new recruitment method called piping This vibration signal causes the swarm to take off and fly to the new nest location In an experimental test this decision making process enabled honey bee swarms to choose the best nest site in four out of five trials 76 77 Synthetic biology editQuorum sensing has been engineered using synthetic biological circuits in different systems Examples include rewiring the AHL components to toxic genes to control population size in bacteria 78 and constructing an auxin based system to control population density in mammalian cells 79 Synthetic quorum sensing circuits have been proposed to enable applications like controlling biofilms 80 or enabling drug delivery 81 Quorum sensing based genetic circuits have been used to convert AI 2 signals to AI 1 and then subsequently use the AI 1 signal to alter bacterial growth rate thereby changing the composition of a consortium 82 Computing and robotics editQuorum sensing can be a useful tool for improving the function of self organizing networks such as the SECOAS Self Organizing Collegiate Sensor environmental monitoring system In this system individual nodes sense that there is a population of other nodes with similar data to report The population then nominates just one node to report the data resulting in power savings 83 Ad hoc wireless networks can also benefit from quorum sensing by allowing the system to detect and respond to network conditions 84 Quorum sensing can also be used to coordinate the behavior of autonomous robot swarms Using a process similar to that used by Temnothorax ants robots can make rapid group decisions without the direction of a controller 85 See also editCell signaling Collective behavior Diffusible signal factor Interspecies quorum sensing Microbial intelligence Pheromone Signal transduction Swarm intelligenceReferences 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Proceedings 2005 IEEE Swarm Intelligence Symposium 2005 SIS 2005 Swarm Intelligence Symposium Proceedings 2005 IEEE pp 357 64 doi 10 1109 SIS 2005 1501643 ISBN 0 7803 8916 6 Sahin E Franks N 2002 Measurement of Space From Ants to Robots Proceedings of WGW 2002 EPSRC BBSRC International Workshop CiteSeerX 10 1 1 161 6407 Further reading editDedicated issue of Philosophical Transactions B on quorum sensing 2007 Some articles are freely available High citation review Waters CM Bassler BL 2005 Quorum sensing cell to cell communication in bacteria Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology 21 319 346 doi 10 1146 annurev cellbio 21 012704 131001 PMID 16212498 External links editThe Quorum Sensing Website Cell to Cell Communication in Bacteria The SECOAS project Development of a Self Organising Wireless Sensor Network for Environmental Monitoring Measurement of Space From Ants to Robots Instant insight into quorum sensing from the Royal Society of Chemistry Bonnie Bassler Discovering bacteria s amazing communication system Bonnie Bassler s seminar Cell Cell Communication in Bacteria Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quorum sensing amp oldid 1205290622, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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