Competitive behaviors in Serratia marcescens are coordinately regulated by a lifestyle switch frequently inactivated in the clinical environment
Abstract
Opportunistic bacterial pathogens must compete with other bacteria and switch between host- and environment-adapted states. Type VI secretion systems (T6SSs) occur widely in gram-negative bacteria and can efficiently kill neighboring competitors. We determined the distribution of T6SSs across the genus Serratia and observed that a highly conserved antibacterial T6SS is differentially active between closely related clinical isolates of Serratia marcescens. By combining genomic and experimental approaches, we identified a genus-core two-component system, BetR-Reg1-Reg2, that controls T6SS activity and exhibits frequent inactivating mutations, exclusively in S. marcescens isolates of clinical origin. This regulatory system controls a number of lifestyle-related traits at transcriptional and post-translational levels, including T6SS activity, antibiotic production, motility, and adhesion, with loss of BetR increasing virulence in an in vivo infection model. Our data support a model whereby this system represents a conserved, modular switch from sessile to pioneering and aggressive behavior, which is subject to selection pressure in clinical environments.
Citation
Williams , D J , Hawkins , A , Hernandez , R E , Mariano , G , Mathers , K , Buchanan , G , Stonier , B J , Inkster , T , Leanord , A , Chalmers , J D , Thomson , N R , Holden , M T G & Coulthurst , S J 2025 , ' Competitive behaviors in Serratia marcescens are coordinately regulated by a lifestyle switch frequently inactivated in the clinical environment ' , Cell Host & Microbe , vol. 33 , no. 2 , pp. 252-266.E5 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chom.2025.01.001
Publication
Cell Host & Microbe
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1931-3128Type
Journal article
Rights
© 2025 The Authors. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Description
Funding: This work was supported by Wellcome (104556/Z/14/Z, 220321/Z/20/Z, 109118/Z/15/Z, 218520/Z/19/Z, and 206194), NIHR (NIHR200639), and Chief Scientist Office (Scotland) Scottish Healthcare Associated Infection Prevention Institute (SIRN/10).Collections
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