Quorum sensing is a regulatory process used by bacteria for controlling gene expression in response to increasing cell density.
1 This regulatory process manifests itself with a variety of phenotypes including biofilm formation and virulence factor production.
2 Coordinated gene expression is achieved by the production, release, and detection of small diffusible signal molecules called autoinducers. The N-
acylated homoserine lactones (AHLs) comprise one such class of autoinducers, each of which generally consists of a fatty acid coupled with homoserine lactone (HSL). AHLs vary in acyl group length (C
4-
C
18), in the substitution of C3 (hydrogen, hydroxyl, or oxo group) and in the presence or absence of one or more carbon-
carbon double bonds in the fatty acid chain. These differences confer signal specificity through the affinity of transcriptional regulators of the LuxR family.
3 C
14:1-
Δ
9-
cis-
(L)-
HSL is a long-
chain AHL that functions as a signaling molecule in the quorum sensing of
A. vitis.
4 Regulating bacterial quorum sensing signaling can be used to inhibit pathogenesis and thus, represents a new approach to antimicrobial therpy in the treatment of infectious diseases.
5