Pseudomonas aeruginosa deploys competitor-specific antagonistic strategies

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Abstract

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Microbial competition shapes polymicrobial communities, yet it remains unclear whether bacteria deploy fixed or specific antagonistic strategies against different rivals. Here we show that Pseudomonas aeruginosa deploys distinct strategies to outcompete two clinically relevant species, Burkholderia cenocepacia and Staphylococcus aureus . Under matched conditions, competition with B. cenocepacia is mediated by contact-dependent Type VI secretion, whereas competition with S. aureus follows a staged diffusible program of alkyl quinolone-mediated growth inhibition followed by LasA-dependent lysis. Transcriptomic analysis supports a “Swiss Army knife” model of antagonism in which different competitive context triggers distinct subsets of P. aeruginosa ’s arsenal. Minimal dynamical models verify that contact-dependent killing is effective against slower-growing competitors, whereas a staged strategy of growth inhibition followed by killing via diffusible factors is preferable against faster-growing rivals. Together, these results show that the competitive success of P. aeruginosa depends on competitor-specific antagonistic strategies.

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  1. Together, these results argue that the antagonistic success of P. aeruginosa depends on its ability to deploy the right weapon with the right timing against the right competitor.

    This is super interesting. But I wonder which strategy would dominate for PA if it were confronted by multiple competitor species simultaneously, as might be the case in natural settings. Would you expect to see activation of all strategies (which could be very costly) or prioritization of one over the other (which could reflect risk level for each species)? Would be fun to see how your results compare to a scenario where you mix all 3 species.