# A quorum-sensing-controlled  aggregative community formation program in Vibrio cholerae

> **NIH NIH K99** · PRINCETON UNIVERSITY · 2020 · $51,091

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY
Vibrio cholerae is the etiological agent of the disease cholera. Cholera is an acute diarrheal disease prevalent in
developing countries and is a major global health burden. The V. cholerae lifecycle is defined by repeated
transitions between the marine environment and the human host. With respect to the disease, ingested
planktonic V. cholerae cells migrate through the mucosal layer to colonize the epithelium of the small intestine.
Infections are self-limiting: At the end of the infection cycle, V. cholerae disperses back into the environment as
a result of the severe diarrhea characteristic of the disease cholera. This lifecycle requires that V. cholerae
repeatedly make the key decision to switch between a free-living planktonic state or to join with others to form
multicellular communities. This decision is controlled by quorum sensing (QS), the process of bacterial cell-cell
communication that relies on the production, release, and group-wide detection of extracellular signal molecules
called autoinducers. QS allows bacteria to collectively alter their behavior based on local population density.
Multicellular community formation in bacteria, including V. cholerae, is commonly studied in the context of
biofilms: surface-bound communities held together by an extracellular matrix. I have discovered an alternative
multicellular community formation program in V. cholerae. This rapid, aggregative community formation program
occurs in the absence of cell-division (<30 min to completion), does not require components essential for V.
cholerae surface-biofilm formation, and occurs in liquid instead of on a surface. Like the surface-biofilm program
this aggregative community formation program requires QS, although the pattern of regulation is different. I have
determined the mechanism underlying how QS controls this new program and I conducted a genetic screen to
identify genes required for aggregative community formation. My screen revealed genes involved in flagellar
synthesis, encoding transcription factors for nutrient deprivation/stress, and a gene unique to the current
pandemic strain of V. cholerae. Many of these genes are required for V. cholerae virulence in a murine model of
cholera. My results suggest that this new multicellular community formation program facilitates transmission from
the human host lumen back to the marine environment, promotes long-term environmental persistence by
privatizing public goods production by the collective, and provides selectivity in community formation. My long-
term goal is to develop a mechanistic and biophysical understanding of this new program of multicellularity in V.
cholerae. I will use the tools of bacterial genetics, microscopy, proteomics, and biochemistry to (1) Determine
how extracellular proteases regulate the timing of aggregative community formation; (2) Identify the structural
components required for aggregative community formation; (3) Explore whether the aggregative communi...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10038440
- **Project number:** 1K99GM138764-01
- **Recipient organization:** PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** Matthew L Jemielita
- **Activity code:** K99 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $51,091
- **Award type:** 1
- **Project period:** 2020-08-01 → 2021-03-12

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10038440

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10038440, A quorum-sensing-controlled  aggregative community formation program in Vibrio cholerae (1K99GM138764-01). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-23 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10038440. Licensed CC0.

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