L-form conversion in Gram-positive bacteria enables escape from phage infection
Abstract
At the end of a lytic bacteriophage replication cycle in Gram-positive bacteria, peptidoglycan-degrading endolysins that cause explosive cell lysis of the host can also attack non-infected bystander cells. Here we show that in osmotically stabilized environments, Listeria monocytogenes can evade phage predation by transient conversion to a cell wall-defcient L-form state. This L-form escape is triggered by endolysins disintegrating the cell wall from without, leading to turgor-driven extrusion of wall-defcient, yet viable L-form cells. Remarkably, in the absence of phage predation, we show that L-forms can quickly revert to the walled state. These fndings suggest that L-form conversion represents a population-level persistence mechanism to evade complete eradication by phage attack. Importantly, we also demonstrate phage-mediated L-form switching of the urinary tract pathogen Enterococcus faecalis in human urine, which underscores that this escape route may be widespread and has important implications for phageand endolysin-based therapeutic interventions. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000602523Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Nature MicrobiologyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
NatureOrganisational unit
03651 - Loessner, Martin / Loessner, Martin
09463 - Pilhofer, Martin / Pilhofer, Martin
Funding
170042 - Role of transient L-form conversion in saprophytic life and disease of Listeria monocytogenes (SNF)
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