Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a driving force for bacterial evolution that occurs via conjugation, transduction, and transformation. Whereas conjugation and transduction depend on nonbacterial vehicles, transformation is considered a naturally occurring process in which naked DNA molecules are taken up by a competent recipient cell. Here, we report that HGT occurred between two Bacillus subtilis strains cocultured on a minimum medium agar plate for 10 h. This process was almost completely resistant to DNase treatment and appeared to require close proximity between cells. The deletion of comK in the recipient completely abolished gene transfer, indicating that the process involved transformation. This process was also highly efficient, reaching 1.75 × 10 6 transformants/μg DNA compared to 5.3 × 103 and 1.86 × 105 transformants/μg DNA for DNA-to-cell transformation by the same agar method and the standard two-step procedure, respectively. Interestingly, when three distantly localized chromosomal markers were selected simultaneously, the efficiency of cell-to-cell transformation still reached 6.26 × 104 transformants/μg DNA, whereas no transformants were obtained when free DNA was used as the donor. Stresses, such as starvation and exposure to antibiotics, further enhanced transformation efficiency by affecting the donor cells, suggesting that stress served as an important signal for promoting this type of HGT. Taken together, our results defined a bona fide process of cell-to-cell natural transformation (CTCNT) in B. subtilis and related species. This finding reveals the previously unrecognized role of donor cells in bacterial natural transformation and improves our understanding of how HGT drives bacterial evolution at a mechanistic level.
CITATION STYLE
Zhang, X., Jin, T., Deng, L., Wang, C., Zhang, Y., & Chen, X. (2018). Stress-induced, highly efficient, donor cell-dependent cell-to-cell natural transformation in Bacillus subtilis. Journal of Bacteriology, 200(17). https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00267-18
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