Thiopeptide antibiotics stimulate biofilm formation in Bacillus subtilis

Abstract

Thiazolyl peptides are known antibiotics produced by diverse bacterial taxa. It has been believed that antibiotics are deployed by bacteria as weapons, providing them with an evolutionary advantage over other microbes. We show here that these weapons can also act as chemical tools that elicit biofilm production in the model bacterium Bacillus subtilis. Importantly, the biofilm-inducing (and therefore signaling) properties of these compounds are independent of their killing activity. We go on to use this biofilm-inducing activity to identify and confirm the presence of thiazolyl peptide gene clusters in other bacteria. These results indicate that thiazolyl peptides, and potentially other antibiotics, have the ability to alter bacterial behavior in ways important both to the environment and to human health

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